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!VIVA FIDEL! LONG LIVE FIDEL! LONG LIVE THE CUBAN REVOLUTION!
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Brad Will Presente!
See what the world has lost:
"I Really Like the Cops" a song by Brad Will
http://www.friendsofbradwill.org/2006/10/28/i-really-like-the-cops-brad-will/
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SCROLL DOWN TO READ:
EVENT ANNOUNCEMENTS
GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
ARTICLES IN FULL
LINKS AND VERY SHORT STORIES
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EVENT ANNOUNCEMENTS
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The Middle East Children's Alliance, Speak Out,
Vanguard Public Foundation and KPFA 94.1FM present:
The Bay Area Premiere of Howard Zinn and Anthony Arnove's
VOICES OF A PEOPLE'S HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES
Thursday, November 9, 2006 - 7:30 pm
Berkeley Community Theatre, 1930 Allston Way
Voices of a People's History of the United States
Dramatic Readings Celebrating the Enduring Spirit of Dissent
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CELEBRATE THE LIFE OF CAROLINE LUND
Memorial Meeting for Caroline Lund
Saturday, November 11, 2:00 PM
Humanist Hall, 390 27th St., Oakland
Between Telegraph and Broadway
Wheelchair accessible from the entrance at 411 28th St.
Caroline fought for social justice for over forty years, in the socialist 
movement, the labor movement, the anti-Vietnam War movement, 
the women's movement, as a leader in the Socialist Workers Party, 
fighting again the U.S. wars in the Middle East, publishing the rank 
and file newsletter "Barking Dog" in the NUMMI auto plant where 
she worked -- wherever people were struggling to better their 
lives. She died of ALS on October 14.
Join with us to remember Caroline's life and work for social justice.
Speakers: 
Malik Miah, editor, Against the Current
John Percy, Democratic Socialist Perspective, Australia
Open Mike
Claudette Begin, Chair
Messages from those unable to attend (which will be available 
to be read at the meeting) should be sent to
Alex Chis 
achis@igc.org 
For more information, email Alex , or call at 510-489-8554.
There will also be a New York Area Memorial Meeting for Caroline
Saturday, November 18, 3:00 PM
Brecht Forum, 451 West St., New York
For more information on the NY meeting, 
contact Gus Horowitz: 914-953-0212 or 
ghorowitz@snet. net
Alex Chis & Claudette Begin 
P.O. Box 2944 
Fremont, CA 94536-0944 
Phone: 510-489-8554 
Email: achis@igc.org 
Caroline Lund-Sheppard
September 24, 1944-October 14, 2006
By Jennifer Biddle
It's my favorite photograph of Caroline: She's just a girl, standing 
straight up, hands neatly folded in front of her, wearing a long, 
white tunic, and an exuberantly silly grin. The minister from her 
family's Lutheran church is standing right behind her, tall, grave, 
and imposing above all the other boys and girls who are lined up 
tidily in two rows to his left. In the center, looming overhead, 
hangs a large, bare cross. It's Confirmation Day and all these boys 
and girls have just accepted Jesus Christ as their everlasting 
savior. Somehow, though, everything fades into the background and 
it's only Caroline your eyes see. All the other girls are wearing 
white shoes and have their hair set in the style of the day - short 
with tight, little curls - so maybe it's Caroline's black shoes and 
her long, straight and pulled-back hair that catch your eye. No, it's 
her face. Everyone else is solemn and still, but Caroline is not - 
her mouth and eyes are full of movement. She's giddy with the light 
of the Lord, some might think. But I know the truth and the truth is 
why I love this picture so much: Caroline, at fourteen, is already an atheist.
Caroline Jean Lund, born September 24, 1944, was the first of two 
girls for Martha and O.P. Lund. Her Swedish-Norwegian upbringing in 
Minneapolis, she liked to say, was a chapter right out of "A Prairie 
Home Companion." Though her dad was a lawyer, and her mother a 
librarian, and their economic circumstances better than most, from a 
young age Caroline was aware of how randomly close to the margin of 
working poverty everyone else was.
Caroline's mom instilled a love of books in her, and by the time 
Caroline abandoned the notion of God, she was reading "The Grapes of 
Wrath" and "Les Miserables." An idealist at 15, she knew she wanted 
to dedicate her life to help end suffering in the world, but she 
didn't know what to do.
When she graduated from high school her family pushed her to continue 
her education, and in 1962, Caroline went off to Carlton College. It 
was at Carlton, a small liberal arts college just south of 
Minneapolis, where Caroline encountered socialist ideas. For 
Caroline, socialism opened up a whole new way of looking at the world 
and understanding it, and she began to get the answers she had been 
searching for.
Carlton had a very active socialist discussion club, whose members 
would later become part of the central leadership of the Socialist 
Workers Party (SWP), the preeminent Trotskyist grouping in America at 
the time. Mary Alice Waters, John Benson, Dan Styron, and Doug 
Jenness could be counted among the members of this club. Jack Barnes, 
who later became the National Secretary of the SWP, had graduated 
from Carlton just a couple of years before Caroline was there. Barnes 
and his wife Betsy Stone had founded the socialist club with others. 
By her second year in college, Caroline had joined the youth wing of 
the SWP, the Young Socialist Alliance (YSA), and immersed herself in 
the ideas of Marx, Engels, Lenin, and Trotsky, and jumped into 
political activity on and off campus.
Caroline's parents did not approve of her increasing involvement with 
the socialist movement. They stopped supporting her and paying for 
college. Drawn more to activism than academics, Caroline quit school, 
worked as a waitress at a diner in Minneapolis, and married for the 
first time, to Doug Jenness.
In spite of the fact that Caroline grew up and went to public schools 
in Minneapolis, she knew nothing about the great Teamster strikes of 
1934 until she joined the socialist club at Carlton. The 1934 strikes 
made Minneapolis a union town and the Teamsters one of the most 
powerful unions in the country.
The leaders of the strike built the Minneapolis SWP branch, and 
several of them were still active members. People like Ray Dunne, 
then in his 70s, recounted the days of the strike to younger members, 
when there was virtually a civil war between workers and bosses. The 
Minneapolis branch had a strong core of working class leaders like 
Dunne, who were able to impart socialist politics and organizing 
skills to new members like Caroline.
In 1965 Caroline and her husband Doug moved to New York City so he 
could work fulltime for the Young Socialist Alliance. Caroline, 
temporarily reconciled with her parents, enrolled at Columbia 
University to continue her studies and do political work on campus.
In 1965, a junior at Columbia, she helped found the Columbia 
Committee Against the War in Vietnam. She debated Michael T. Klare - 
now a well-known intellectual - over whether the antiwar movement 
should call for immediate troop withdrawal in Vietnam (which she was 
for), or whether the U.S. should negotiate with the National 
Liberation Front and North Vietnamese (which he was for).
Caroline also worked closely with radical members of Students for a 
Democratic Society on the Columbia campus. Though their paths would 
soon diverge, David Gilbert - who would later join the Weather 
Underground and serve a life sentence in prison for his alleged part 
in a robbery and murder - was the chairman of the campus antiwar 
group when Caroline served as its secretary.
On several occasions at SWP forums Caroline had the privilege of 
hearing Malcolm X speak in person. She remembered him to be very 
humble and humorous, and said he spoke as if he were one with the 
audience. "The thing about Malcolm X was you could tell he was 
seeking the truth," she said. "He didn't presume to know everything. 
He was not afraid to seek the truth, wherever it might lead him. He 
was a revolutionary deep down, even before he knew a revolution was 
necessary."
It was around this time, in 1965, that Caroline met Barry Sheppard, 
who was also a young leader in the SWP. They ended their previous 
relationships, married the following year, and remained comrades and 
companions for the rest of Caroline's life.
In 1967 Caroline became a fulltime staff person at the SWP 
headquarters in New York City. She was the Secretary-Treasurer of the 
Fred Halstead and Paul Boutelle SWP presidential campaign during the 
1968 election. Later that year, Caroline and Barry went to Brussels, 
Belgium to live and work as the SWP's and YSA's representatives to 
the United Secretariat of the Fourth International. It was an 
exciting time to be a revolutionary in Europe. Near revolution still 
echoed from Paris where the May-June student-worker general strike 
had a profound impact on the continent. The French Trotskyists played 
a big role in the May-June events, and Caroline and Barry got to know 
many of them and other socialists in Europe.
In 1970, Caroline and Barry returned to the U.S. to participate in 
the student strike against the war that swept the country.
Caroline then worked as a staff writer for the SWP's newspaper, The 
Militant. She was office-mates with Farrell Dobbs - probably the 
best-known leader of the '34 Teamster strike and author of three 
volumes on the subject. Dobbs loved his scotch, and on occasion 
Caroline and Barry would join him for one after work.
The SWP was in its heyday - by 1976 it had several thousand members 
spread across the country, and fully participated in the new 
movements that blossomed in the wake of the civil rights struggles of 
the previous decade. Caroline wrote voluminously about the issues 
that fed the fire of these movements - from women's liberation and 
abortion rights, the anti-Vietnam war movement, labor politics, and 
third world struggles for independence. She covered international 
events like the 1974 revolution in Portugal, and traveled in Spain to 
report on the explosive mass movements that developed in the wake of 
the death of the fascist dictator, Francisco Franco in 1975.
Caroline and Barry returned to Europe as members of the United 
Secretariat, this time to live and work in Paris, from 1977 to 1980. 
They were part of a new leadership team, together with younger 
European leaders including Charles-Andre Udry and Charles Michaloux 
from Switzerland and France, and Jim Percy and Nita Kieg from 
Australia. From Paris, Caroline participated in the debates raging 
among radicals over which way forward for the movements of the 1960s.
When Caroline returned to the States in early 1980, the SWP shifted 
its political focus towards unionized workers. The SWP thought that 
the 1978 miners' strike, the formation of Miners for Democracy, and 
the Steelworkers Fight Back Campaign, signaled a new militancy in the 
American working class.
Never one to sit on the sidelines, Caroline jumped in with both feet. 
Though she had mainly done office work, Caroline took her first real 
industrial job at a GM plant in North Tarrytown, New York in 1980. 
She lost 10 pounds in two weeks she said, "sweating buckets, coming 
home completely exhausted."
Just as she had thrown herself into books by Marx, Engels, Lenin, and 
Trotsky as a Carlton student, Caroline immersed herself in all the 
key struggles and strikes American workers were involved in the late 
1970s and early 1980s. She did solidarity work for PATCO, Greyhound, 
Eastern, and Hormel workers.
She also changed jobs frequently, working in seven different unions 
from 1980 to 1988. Caroline was an autoworker, a garment worker, an 
electrical worker, a telephone worker, an oil worker, and a steel 
worker - and a member of the UAW, the ILGWU, the ACTU, the IUE, the 
CWA, the OCAW, and the USW. Later she would come to think that the 
SWP policy of moving people from job to job was a terrible mistake, 
and prevented members from sinking roots in their factories and unions.
In the 1980s the SWP was floundering. Workers were losing key 
battles, unions were capitulating to employers and the government, 
and a conservative political shift occurred in the country reflected 
by the election of Ronald Reagan - all of which the SWP leadership 
failed to recognize. Both Caroline and Barry found themselves 
increasingly at odds with the leadership of the SWP over the 
direction of the group and in 1988 they both resigned.
Caroline and Barry moved from east to west and settled in the San 
Francisco Bay Area where they could be near their old friend and 
former SWP comrade Malik Miah, and do political work with Socialist 
Action. Caroline found a job at an oil refinery for a short while, 
and then at the NUMMI automobile plant in 1992. At NUMMI, Caroline 
was a production worker until early 2006, when she went on disability 
due to her illness.
From 1993 to the present Caroline was an independent socialist, 
working with various groups, including Solidarity, the International 
Socialist Organization, Socialist Action, and the Socialist Workers 
Organization. She supported any effort for a just cause, marching in 
antiwar demonstrations following the Bush Administration' s attack on 
Iraq no matter who organized them.
Caroline focused much of her energy in her later years on her union 
work in the UAW. She published one of the best rank and file plant 
newsletters in the United States, the Barking Dog, for eight years. 
She built up its readership and in the end distributed over 1,000 
copies each print run to her coworkers. NUMMI workers loved it, 
giving it a circulation closer to 5,000 by passing it around the plant.
The Barking Dog defended workers against the company's abuses and 
criticized the union bureaucrats of the Administration Caucus when 
they did not. Over time, as Caroline built support for the 
newsletter, she gave other workers a platform to voice their opinions 
on everything from speed-ups to contracting out to bureaucratic 
excesses at union conventions.
The union establishment was not fond of Caroline. Once the President 
and the Chairman of the Bargaining Committee of her union local 
threatened her with a lawsuit for a criticism she made of them in the 
Barking Dog. Caroline quickly hired a lawyer to defend her free 
speech rights then exposed the President and the Chairman in the 
Barking Dog. Workers were outraged that top union officials would 
seek to silence a rank and file worker. Support for her in the plant 
led to Caroline being elected Trustee for the union local, where she 
oversaw union finances and sat on the Executive Committee. Through 
her activism, Caroline developed a reputation in her plant for being 
fearless, honest, and knowledgeable.
In the last year of its publication, the Barking Dog focused on a 
struggle led by autoworkers at General Motors and the Delphi parts 
plant. These autoworkers called themselves Soldiers of Solidarity 
(SOS), and fought the use of bankruptcy to force contracts on workers 
containing massive concessions. The Barking Dog carried statements by 
SOS and reprinted news and comments from rank and file newsletters by 
SOS members - like Live Bait and Ammo, the newsletter published by 
SOS spokesman and Delphi worker Greg Shotwell.
Above all, Caroline believed in the ability of workers to run their 
own unions and workplaces. "The rank and file are very ignorant about 
what real unionism is because they've never seen it in action, like 
the old-timers in the 1930s and 40s. But in many ways the rank and 
file understand more than the union officials," she said. "Malcolm X 
said that this society runs on money. The companies believe that for 
most people you lay that money down, and your soul goes with it. This 
is true in the short term. I don't think most of the existing unions 
can be reformed. They are too steeped in the culture of 'cooperation' 
with the companies, where the leadership thinks of the union as a 
source of perks for themselves and their friends. New unions are 
going to have to arise, from the bottom up, out of the ashes of the 
old." Caroline also believed solidarity among workers would 
eventually win over self-interest, and this would revive the labor 
and socialist movements. It's a theme that runs through her 
experiences in Cuba, a country Caroline and Barry visited together in 
1997. What impressed Caroline most about Cuba were the ordinary 
people. She loved the children who were so self-confident, healthy, 
and good-natured. And she had an especially fond memory of a young 
doctor at a maternity hospital she visited: He could have made many 
times more his salary being a taxi driver for tourists, but chose 
instead a career he felt more useful to others. "From what we saw, 
the Cubans made progress in creating a new kind of human being," she 
said. "Though there's a real question when Fidel dies: Has there been 
enough growth of a new human mind set or human culture that will 
continue to value human needs and progress over profits?"
Put simply Caroline was a truth-seeker. In all the ups and downs of 
her career as a socialist, she never once wavered from the truth she 
sought in her politics or in the idealism that fueled her passions. 
She was also just a great human being - compassionate, pragmatic, 
courageous, smart, and genuine to the core. I'll never forget her 
admonishing me several years ago for worrying that my Pentecostal 
fundamentalist in-laws were surreptitiously taking my impressionable 
six-year-old to church with them: "For crying out loud Jennifer, your 
son should see the inside of a church!"
[Caroline Lund, a long time socialist and union activist, died on 
October 14, 2006 from Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's 
Disease. She was 62-years-old. Jennifer Biddle met Caroline in 1995 
when they did solidarity work together in San Francisco for striking 
Staley workers. They remained good friends and comrades since.] 
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JROTC IN SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC SCHOOLS:
The issue of JROTC in S.F. public schools will be addressed
at the San Francisco Board of Education 
Meeting:
Tuesday, November 14th, 7:00 P.M.
(This will be a big meeting. You should show up at 6:00 P.M.)
555 Franklin Street, 1st Floor
San Francisco, CA 94102
To get on the speakers list for the Regular Board Meeting call:
415/241-6427
(Call on Monday, the day before the meeting from 8:30 A.M. until 4:00 P.M.
or Tuesday, the day of the meeting from 8:30 A.M. until 3:00 P.M.)
American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) 
Outreach Letter for November 14 Board of Education Meeting
Dear Friends:
The San Francisco Unified School District Board is considering 
a resolution to phase out the Junior Reserves Officer Training 
Corp (JROTC) program over the next year while creating 
a community based task force to create a program that retains 
many of its popular elements without a military overtone.   
(It may be amended to include concern about militarization 
of youth.) We are writing to ask your organization or you 
to endorse this resolution, to notify the members of the 
school board of your support and to come to the board 
meeting and testify in favor of the resolution. 
We believe that this measure makes sense for the City and 
County of San Francisco.  Voters voiced their opposition to 
military recruiters in the schools by passing Measure I.  
While JROTC officials claim that the program is designed 
to promote citizenship, Rudy de Leon, Under Secretary of 
Defense, testifying before the Military Personnel Subcommittee 
House Comm. On Armed Services in March 2000 said, “about 25% 
of the graduating high school seniors in School Year 1997 – 98 with 
more than two years participation in the JROTC program are 
interested in some type of military affiliation.  Translating this 
to hard recruiting numbers, in FYs 1996 – 10000, about 8,000 
new recruits per year entered active duty after completing two 
years of JROTC.  The proportion of JROTC graduates who enter 
the military following completion of high school is roughly 
five times greater than the proportion of non-JROTC students.”
In enticing young people to join the military, recruiters make 
many promises including specialized training and college. 
However, according to their own written policies, a recruiter 
has no power to force the military to honor his or her promises.  
While many low-income youth and youth of color see the military 
as a potential resource for the future, the studies show that 
this is not case; fewer than 50% ever utilize the limited college 
benefits for veterans.
Currently, the School Board resolution is focused on the 
district’s own policy of not contracting with any entity that 
discriminates.  We know that the U.S. military overtly discriminates 
against gay, lesbian, bi-sexual and trans-gendered people.  
While the JROTC command indicates that they allow LGBT 
students to participate and even assume leadership roles, 
these students are denied the specific benefits of participating 
in the JROTC program – namely, eligibility for military scholarships 
at the academies enrollment in the military at a higher pay-grade 
after two or more years of participation in the program and eligibility 
for SROTC scholarships because openly LGBT people are not allowed 
to serve in the military.  
We urge you to support this campaign regardless of your personal 
view of the military.  In our democracy, the role of the military 
is separate from the roles of civil society.  The military’s role 
is not to educate our children in the public schools.  Our public 
schools are designed to prepare our children for their roles 
as valued members of our community, instilling values of  
responsibility, respect, tolerance and leadership.  
If you have questions please call us at 415-565-0201 extension 
24 for Sandra, 11 for Alan Lessik, and 12 for Stephen McNeil.  
Sincerely yours,
Alan Lessik, Regional Director; Stephen McNeil, Peace Education Director;
Sandra Schwartz, Peace Ed. Coordinator; Tony Nguyen, Asian Pacific Director
State ranks second in Army recruits
By Lisa Friedman Washington Bureau
San Gabriel Valley Tribune
Californians comprised about 10 percent of the Army's new 
soldiers this year, second only to Texas in providing new recruits, 
according to newly released figures.
October 16, 2006
http://www.sgvtribu ne.com/news/ ci_4485649
Here are some links to JROTC facts: 
Review of the JROTC Curriculum
http://www.afsc. org/youthmil/ militarism- in-schools/ JROTC-review. htm
Making Soldiers - PDF
http://www.afsc. org/youthmil/ militarism- in-schools/ msitps.pdf
Report Says JROTC Benefits Students; Calls for More Funding for Programs
By Julie Blair
September 29, 1999
http://www.jrotc.org/jrotc_benifits.htm
JROTC is a Recruiting Program for Dead-End Military Jobs
http://www.objector.org/jrotc/jrotcrecruits.html
Why Question the Military's JROTC Program?
http://www.objector.org/jrotc/why.html
JROTC Challenging Progressive Ideals of Youth Voice
by Peter Lauterborn, 2006-10-25
http://www.beyondchron.org/articles/JROTC_Challenging_Progressive_Ideals_of_Youth_Voice_3830.html
San Francisco progressives are ablaze with optimism that one 
of the most institutionalized sources of militarization—the JROTC
—is now on the verge of being cut out of the City’s public schools. 
Students who support the program, however, are feeling betrayed 
by the school district and by progressives who had previously 
touted the significance of youth voice in all policy making.
The crux of the issues is that the San Francisco Unified 
School District (SFUSD) does not offer enough leadership 
programs of its own, and does not sufficiently recruit students 
to join. This leaves the JROTC as the sole option for youth who 
are looking for leadership, self-sufficiency, and better education. 
JROTC is a national program run by all branches of the United 
States military. Started in 1916 in the mists of World War I, 
the program aims at providing leadership opportunities 
to high school students while promoting good citizenship 
and academic achievement. Students who enroll in JROTC—
which is offered as an elective course—can use the credit 
to fulfill physical education requirements and have access 
to activities such as camping and social events. The program 
also offers a curriculum which covers history, health, civics, 
college preparation, and more. These offers are all good 
components of a rounded education which we should 
be providing
But below the surface of a challenging and fulfilling extra 
curricular program, the clear purpose of JROTC is to identify 
and recruit students who could serve in the United State 
military. Perhaps people forget what JROTC stands for: 
Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps. Right there, 
in its name, the purpose of the program is defined. 
And in a city which successfully fought the docking 
of the USS Iowa battleship at its shore, and formalized 
its opposition to the Iraq War at the ballot box, subjecting 
high school students to militarization is seen 
as a dangerous path to follow.
The resolution, which is to be voted on by the School Board 
after the November election, calls for a two-year phase out 
of JROTC. A program which would emulate the positive 
opportunities offered by the JROTC would then 
be designed and implemented. 
Contrary to popular belief, the costs of running the JROTC 
are not split evenly between the SFUSD and the Federal 
Government. According to the SFUSD’s budget analysis, 
the District is only reimbursed for 43% of the costs, 
of which most is dedicated to salaries. The budget 
analysis also concluded that there would be no significant 
cost in replacing JROTC with conventional physical 
education courses, barring any facility inadequacies.
Proponents of the JROTC phase-out also point to the 
military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy towards the 
inclusion of gays and lesbians into the armed forces. 
They claim that this conflicts with the SFUSD’s policy 
to not contract with any agency which discriminates 
in any way.
However, student leaders—particularly the SFUSD’s 
Student Advisory Council (SAC)—are up in arms over 
both the proposed closure and the perception that the 
District is not concerned with the will of the students 
it serves. “There shouldn’t be a discussion on whether 
or not it should stay,” says SAC President and Mission 
High senior Alvin Rivera, “The students have voiced 
that they wish for it to stay.” The SAC has opposed 
any closure of the JROTC program for three years, 
and will be discussing the issue at their October 23 
meeting. “It serves as a functioning body for the 
schools well-being,” he added.
Student support for JRTOC seems to not stem from 
the military aspect of the program. Rather, they are 
appreciative of being reached out to and brought 
into a program which has improved the lives 
of many students. While the SFUSD and the City 
offer a wide array of programs for students, their 
recruiting efforts come nowhere close to the 
aggressive recruitment conducted by the military. 
A recent graduate of Balboa High School—who 
asked not to be named and is personally opposed 
to the JROTC—said that many students are indifferent 
to the details of the JRTOC, but see the program’s 
closure as yet another item within a growing list 
of opportunities that are taken away, without their 
input and without any replacement.
The fears students have over the loss of the JROTC 
program may lie within the belief in the competency 
of the SFUSD to sufficiently replace the program. 
The SFUSD’s inability to create effective community-
based programs in the past is embarrassing, 
and the public has good reason to suspect future 
promises.
The SFUSD has not been deaf to the concerns of 
students, however. The call for a two-year phase-
out rather than an immediate canceling of the program 
would allow most of this year’s sophomores, juniors, 
and seniors to complete the program. While the 
current and future freshmen classes would not be 
allowed into the program—enrollment will be whittled 
down each year with no new students being allowed 
to enter the program—they all have ample 
opportunities to find other programs. 
Of course, for this all to work, the SFUSD and the 
City must make significant efforts to bring their 
programs to the students, rather than expecting 
students to go hunt down different programs 
themselves.
A major concern is that students who participate 
in the JROTC program are not hit hard with the military 
recruitment aspect until late in their senior year—right 
when questions about paying for college are bubbling 
up. What this creates is a disconnect between students 
and adults: adults know about the end goals of the JROTC, 
and yet students who are in the program don’t see the 
recruitment, and then feel marginalized by adults when 
recruitment is discussed. 
The SFUSD must address the root cause of support for 
the JROTC: a lack of other programs that engage youth. 
New programs should not just be more physical education 
courses, but with a program includes leadership 
development, self-sufficiency, and better education. 
And without the militaristic mindset of the JROTC.
ACCREDITED
Army Junior ROTC Program
Mission Statement:
https://gateway.usarmyjrotc.com/http://portal.usarmyjrotc.com/jrotc/dt
To Motivate Young People to Be Better Citizens
The JROTC program intends to teach cadets to:
 Appreciate the ethical values and principles that 
underlie good citizenship.
 Develop leadership potential, while living 
and working cooperatively with others.
 Be able to think logically and to communicate 
effectively with others, both orally and in writing.
 Appreciate the importance of physical fitness 
in maintaining good health.
 Understand the importance of high school graduation 
for a successful future, and learn about college 
and other advanced educations and employment 
opportunities.
 Develop mental management abilities.
 Become familiar with military history as it relates to America's 
culture, and understand the history, purpose, and structure 
of the military services.
 Develop the skills necessary to work effectively as a member of a team.
Candidates sound off on JROTC
Board of Education race
by Roger Brigham
http://www.ebar.com/news/article.php?sec=news&article=1220 
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- - 
Support Korean General Strike with Solidarity Action at Korean 
Consulate in SF
November 15, 2006 @ 12:00 Noon
3500 Clay St/Laurel St.
San Francisco
- Free Jailed Trade Unionists and Drop Criminal Charges Against Union 
Leaders and Activists
- Eliminate Repressive Anti-Labor Legislation "9-11 Deal"
- Stop Gender Discrimination Against Korean Women Workers
The Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) will launch a General 
Strike on November 15. In conjunction with this strike, the KCTU is 
calling on the international community to coordinate a series of 
actions and events to support their struggle.
Korean workers are fighting against massive repression and jailing of 
trade unionists. The government is seeking to destroy the Korean 
Government Employees Union (KGEU) and the Korean Federation of 
Construction Industry Trade Unions (KFCITU). There will be actions 
worldwide to demand justice for Korean workers.
WHAT YOU CAN DO
Support the solidarity picket and rally at the Korean Consulate in 
San Francisco on November 15, 2006 at 12:00 noon. Get your local or 
organization to send a representative.
Send a protest letter to President Roh Moo Hyun at the Blue House: 
82-2-770-1690 (Fax) or e-mail at president [at] cwd.go.kr Copies 
should be sent to the Minister of Labour, Minister Lee Sang-Soo at 
82-2-504-6708, 82-2-507-4755 (Fax) or e-mail at m_molab [at] 
molab.go.kr. And sent to the Minister of General Administration and 
Home Affairs, Minister Lee Yong-Sup at 82-2-2100-4001(Fax)
Please send copies to the KCTU at 82-2-2635-1134(Fax) or e-mail at 
inter [at] kctu.org
If you have any questions or need more information, please contact:
Lee Changgeun
International Director
Korean Confederation of Trade Unions
Tel.: +82-2-2670-9234 Fax: +82-2-2635-1134
E-mail: inter [at] kctu.org
Web-site : http://kctu.org
2nd Fl. Daeyoung Bld., 139 Youngdeungpo-2-ga,
Youngdeungpo-ku,
Seoul 150-032 Korea
Endorsed by San Francisco Labor Council, Transport Workers Solidarity 
Committee, Labor Video Project, Open World Conference, and others.
For More information and to Endorse call (415) 867-0628 or email 
lvpsf [at] labornet.org
OWC - Open World Conference in Defense of Trade Union
Independence & Democratic Rights, c/o S.F. Labor Council,
1188 Franklin St., #203, San Francisco, CA 94109.
Phone: (415) 641-8616   Fax: (415) 440-9297.
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
Close the SOA and Change Oppressive U.S. Foreign Policy
Nov. 17-19, 2006 - Converge on Fort Benning, Georgia
People's Movements across the Americas are becoming increasingly more
powerful. Military "solutions" to social problems as supported by
institutions like the School of the Americas were unable to squash their
voices, and the call for justice and accountability is getting louder each
day.
Add your voice to the chorus, demand justice for all the people of the
Americas and engage in nonviolent direct action to close the SOA and
change oppressive U.S. foreign policy.
With former SOA graduates being unmasked in Chile, Argentina, Colombia,
Paraguay, Honduras, and Peru for their crimes against humanity, and with
the blatant similarities between the interrogation methods and torture
methods used at Abu Ghraib and those described in human rights abuse cases
in Latin America, the SOA/WHINSEC must be held accountable!
Visit http://www.soaw. org to learn more about the November Vigil, hotel
and travel information, the November Organizing Packet, and more.
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- - 
ANTI-CORPORATION FILM FESTIVAL! 
December 1 thru 3, 2006 (Friday thru Sunday!) 
Victoria Theatre, Mission District 
2961 16th St @ Mission St (across from the BART station) 
** GREAT FILMS ** ACTIVISM ** SPEAKERS ** PARTIES ** DISCUSSION **  
$5 per film or $40 all weekend pass - Students and activists 
$10 per film or $75 all weekend pass - General admission 
Your ticket price is a donation to cover our costs. 
Films such as Century of the Self and The Corporation will 
be shown, complemented by new cutting-edge films about 
corporate power such as The Forest for the Trees, a documentary 
about the legal case of Judy Bari made by the daughter of Bari's 
attorney. The final program will be announced in November. 
Speakers on Saturday night will begin at 7:00 pm and offer 
further insight into the films, corporations, and the structure 
of our economy as a whole. In addition, there will be a festival 
after-party on the evening of Sunday, December 3 with 
refreshments and entertainment. 
CounterCorp is an anti-corporate nonprofit organization 
accepting no corporate donations. All of your donations 
go to exposing the truth about corporations and finding 
Alternatives to corporate ownership of our communities. 
If you would like to support us, please visit 
www.countercorp.org/countercorp-support.htm
 and click on "Donate Now." Every little bit helps. Thank you! 
Built in 1908 as a vaudeville house, the 500-seat Victoria 
Theatre is the oldest theater currently operation in San Francisco. 
We thought this would be a perfect setting to begin to dream 
beyond the memes of timed obsolescence and creative destruction 
that corporations have injected into our societies, to a time before 
the corporate agenda prevailed above all else. For directions 
and info, please visit www.victoriatheatre.org. 
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED! Volunteering both before and/or during 
the festival will earn you a FREE PASS to all films and parties! 
Please contact volunteers@countercorp.org! 
www.countercorp.org -for more info! 
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
Drums Across America for Peace
December 16, 2006 simultaneously across
the country at 11:00 to 11:30 A.M. PST
For More Information contact:
Marilyn Sjaastad
541-344-8088
Jade Screen Clinic
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
MARCH 17, 2007 GLOBAL DAY OF ACTION ON THE 4TH ANNIVERSARY
OF THE WAR! 
DEMONSTRATIONS IN WASHINGTON, D.C.; LOS ANGELES; 
SAN FRANCISCO; SEATTLE; CHICAGO AND OTHER CITIES AND
TOWNS THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY AND THE WORLD. THE 
A.N.S.W.E.R. COALITION URGES EVERYONE IN THE ANTIWAR
MOVEMENT TO COME TOGETHER IN UNITY AGAINST THE
CRIMINAL ACTIONS OF THE U.S. GOVERNMENT
http://www.pephost. org/site/ PageServer? pagename= ANS_homepage
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- - 
May Day 2007
National Mobilization to Support Immigrant Workers! 
Web: http://www.MayDay2007.net
National Immigrant Solidarity Network
No Immigrant Bashing! Support Immigrant Rights!
webpage: http://www.ImmigrantSolidarity.org
e-mail: info@ImmigrantSolidarity.org 
New York: (212)330-8172
Los Angeles: (213)403-0131
Washington D.C.: (202)595-8990
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS 
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
TAX FACT SHEET
http://www.urban.org/UploadedPDF/901006_taxpolicy.pdf
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
Do You Want to Stop PREVENT War with Iran?
        
Dear Friend,
Every day, pundits and military experts debate on TV when, how and where
war with Iran will occur. Can the nuclear program be destroyed? Will the
Iranian government retaliate in Iraq or use the oil weapon? Will it take
three or five days of bombing? Will the US bomb Iran with "tactical"
nuclear weapons?
Few discuss the human suffering that yet another war in the Middle East
will bring about. Few discuss the thousands and thousands of innocent
Iranian and American lives that will be lost. Few think ahead and ask
themselves what war will do to the cause of democracy in Iran or to
America's global standing.
Some dismiss the entire discussion and choose to believe that war simply
cannot happen. The US is overstretched, the task is too difficult, and
the world is against it, they say. 
They are probably right, but these factors don't make war unlikely. They
just make a successful war unlikely. 
At the National Iranian American Council (NIAC), we are not going to
wait and see what happens. 
We are actively working to stop the war and we need your help!
Working with a coalition of peace and security organizations in
Washington DC, NIAC is adding a crucial dimension to this debate - the
voice of the Iranian-American community.
Through our US-Iran Media Resource Program
http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabumkFbIfQs8eafpLV5/ 
http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabumkFbIfQs8eafpLV5/ , we help
the media ask the right questions and bring attention to the human side
of this issue. 
Through the LegWatch program 
http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabummRbIfQs8eafpLV5/ 
http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabummRbIfQs8eafpLV5/ , 
we are building opposition to the war on Capitol Hill. We spell out the likely
consequences of war and the concerns of the Iranian-American community
on Hill panels
http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabumkGbIfQs8eafpLV5/ 
http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabumkGbIfQs8eafpLV5/
and in direct meetings with lawmakers. We recently helped more than a dozen
Members of Congress - both Republican and Democrats - send a strong
message against war to the White House
http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabumkHbIfQs8eafpLV5/ 
http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabumkHbIfQs8eafpLV5/
But more is needed, and we need your help!
If you don't wish to see Iran turn into yet another Iraq, please make a
contribution online or send in a check to:
NIAC
2801 M St NW
Washington DC 20007
Make the check out to NIAC and mark it "NO WAR."
ALL donations are welcome, both big and small. And just so you know,
your donations make a huge difference. Before you leave the office
today, please make a contribution to stop the war.
Sincerely,
Trita Parsi
President of NIAC
U.S. Labor Against the War (USLAW)
www.uslaboragainstwar.org
 http://www.uslaboragainstwar.org/
Email: info@uslaboragainstwar.org
PMB 153
1718 "M" Street, NW
Washington, D.C. 20036
Voicemail: 202/521-5265
Co-convenors:  Gene Bruskin, Maria Guillen, Fred Mason,                         
Bob Muehlenkamp, and Nancy Wohlforth                 
Michael Eisenscher, National Organizer & Website Coordinator                 
Virginia Rodino, Organizer                 
Adrienne Nicosia, Administrative Staff 
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
Enforce the Roadless Rule for National Forests
Target: Michael Johanns, Secretary, USDA
Sponsor: Earthjustice
We, the Undersigned, endorse the following petition:
This past September, Earthjustice scored a huge victory for our roadless 
national forests when a federal district court ordered the reinstatement 
of the Roadless Rule. 
The Roadless Rule protects roadless forest areas from road-building 
and most logging. This is bad news for the timber, mining, and oil 
& gas industries ... And so they're putting pressure on their friends 
in the Bush Administration to challenge the victory. 
Roadless area logging tends to target irreplaceable old growth forests. 
Many of these majestic trees have stood for hundreds of years. 
By targeting old-growth, the timber companies are destroying 
natural treasures that cannot be replaced in our lifetime. 
The future of nearly 50 million acres of wild, national forests 
and grasslands hangs in the balance. Tell the secretary of the 
USDA, Michael Johanns, to protect our roadless areas by enforcing 
the Roadless Rule. The minute a road is cut through a forest, that 
forest is precluded from being considered a "wilderness area," and 
thus will not be covered by any of the Wilderness Area protections 
afforded by Congress. 
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/112283692?z00m=6687205&z00m=6687205<l=1162406255
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
Mumia Abu-Jamal - Reply brief, U.S. Court of Appeals (Please Circulate)
Dear Friends: 
 
On October 23, 2006, the Fourth-Step Reply Brief of Appellee and 
Cross-Appellant, Mumia Abu-Jamal was submitted to the U.S. Court 
of Appeals for the Third Circuit, Philadelphia.  (Abu-Jamal v. Horn, 
U.S. Ct. of Appeals Nos. 01-9014, 02-9001.)  
 
Oral argument will likely be scheduled during the coming months.  
I will advise when a hearing date is set.
 
The attached brief is of enormous consequence since it goes 
to the essence of our client's right to a fair trial, due process 
of law, and equal protection of the law, guaranteed by the Fifth, 
Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.  
The issues include:
Whether Mr. Abu-Jamal was denied the right to due process 
of law and a fair trial because of the prosecutor’s “appeal-after
-appeal” argument which encouraged the jury to disregard the 
presumption of innocence and reasonable doubt, and err 
on the side of guilt.
Whether the prosecution’s exclusion of African Americans 
from sitting on the jury violated Mr. Abu-Jamal’s right 
to due process and equal protection of the law, 
in contravention of Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79 (1986).
Whether Mr. Abu-Jamal was denied due process and equal 
protection of the law during a post-conviction hearing 
because of the bias and racism of Judge Albert F. Sabo, 
who was overheard during the trial commenting that 
he was “going to help'em fry the nigger."
That the federal court is hearing issues which concern 
Mr. Abu-Jamal's right to a fair trial is a great milestone 
in this struggle for human rights.  This is the first time 
that any court has made a ruling in nearly a quarter 
of a century that could lead to a new trial and freedom.  
Nevertheless, our client remains on Pennsylvania's death 
row and in great danger.
Mr. Abu-Jamal, the "voice of the voiceless," is a powerful 
symbol in the international campaign against the death 
penalty and for political prisoners everywhere.  The goal 
of Professor Judith L. Ritter, associate counsel, and 
I is to see that the many wrongs which have occurred 
in this case are righted, and that at the conclusion 
of a new trial our client is freed.
Your concern is appreciated
With best wishes,
Robert R. Bryan
Law Offices of Robert R. Bryan
2088 Union Street, Suite 4
San Francisco, California 94123
Lead counsel for Mumia Abu-Jamal
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *---------*---------*
Antiwar Web Site Created by Troops
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A small group of active-duty military members opposed to the war 
have created a Web site intended to collect thousands of signatures 
of other service members. People can submit their name, rank and 
duty station if they support statements denouncing the American 
invasion. “Staying in Iraq will not work and is not worth the price,” 
the Web site, appealforredress.org, says. “It is time for U.S. troops 
to come home.” The electronic grievances will be passed along 
to members of Congress, according to the Web site. Jonathan 
Hutto, a Navy seaman based in Norfolk, Va., who set up the Web 
site a month ago, said the group had collected 118 names and 
was trying to verify that they were legitimate service members.
October 25, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/25/washington/25brfs-005.html
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
Judge Orders Release of Abu Ghraib Child Rape Photos
Submitted by davidswanson on Mon, 2006-10-23 20:54. Evidence
By Greg Mitchell, http://www.editorandpublisher.com
http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/14864
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
Profound new assault on freedom of speech and assembly:
Manhattan: New Rules for Parade Permits
By AL BAKER
After recent court rulings found the Police Department's 
parade regulations too vague, the department is moving 
to require parade permits for groups of 10 or more 
bicyclists or pedestrians who plan to travel more than 
two city blocks without complying with traffic laws. 
It is also pushing to require permits for groups of 30 
or more bicyclists or pedestrians who obey traffic laws. 
The new rules are expected to be unveiled in a public 
notice today. The department will discuss them at 
a hearing on Nov. 27. Norman Siegel, a lawyer whose 
clients include bicyclists, said the new rules 
"raise serious civil liberties issues."
October 18, 2006
http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 10/18/nyregion/ 18mbrfs-002. html
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- - 
Soul-Sick Nation: An Astrologer's View of America
Jessica Murray
Format: Paperback (6x9) 
ISBN 1425971253
Price: $ 13.95 
About the Book
Astrology and geopolitics may seem strange bedfellows, but 
Soul-Sick Nation puts the two together to provide a perspective 
as extraordinary as the times we are living in. Using the principles 
of ancient wisdom to make sense of the current global situation, 
this book invites us to look at the USA from the biggest possible 
picture: that of cosmic meaning. With a rare blend of compassion, 
humor and fearless taboo-busting, Soul-Sick Nation reveals 
America's noble potential without sentiment and diagnoses 
its neuroses without delusion, shedding new light on troubling 
issues that the pundits and culture wars inflame but leave 
painfully unresolved: the WTC bombings, the war in Iraq, 
Islamic jihad, media propaganda, consumerism and the 
American Dream.
In her interpretation of the birth chart of the entity born 
July 4, 1776, Murray offers an in-depth analysis of America's
essential destiny--uncovering , chapter by chapter, the greater 
purpose motivating this group soul. She shows how this 
purpose has been distorted, and how it can be re-embraced 
in the decades to come. She decodes current astrological 
transits that express the key themes the USA must learn 
in this period of millennial crisis—including that of the 
responsibility of power—spelling out the profound lessons 
the nation will face in the next few years.
Combining the rigor of a political theorist with the vision 
of a master astrologer, this keenly intelligent book elucidates 
the meaning of an epoch in distress, and proposes a path 
towards healing—of the country and of its individual citizens. 
Murray explains how each of us can come to terms with this 
moment in history and arrive at a response that is unique 
and creative. This book will leave you revitalized, shorn 
of illusions and full of hope.
About the Author
"Jessica Murray's Soul-Sick Nation raises the symbol-system 
of astrology to the level of a finely-honed tool for the critical 
work of social insight and commentary. Her unflinching, 
in-depth analysis answers a crying need of our time. Murray's 
application of laser beam-lucid common sense analysis 
to the mire of illusions we've sunken into as a nation is 
a courageous step in the right direction... Just breathtaking! "
--Raye Robertson, author of Culture, Media and the Collective Mind
" Jessica Murray,..a choice-centered, psychospiritually- oriented 
astrologer.. . has quietly made a real difference in the lives of her 
clients, one at a time. In "Soul Sick Nation," she applies exactly those 
same skills to understanding America as a whole. Starting from 
the premise that the United States is currently a troubled adolescent, 
she applies an unflinching gaze to reach an ultimately compassionate 
conclusion about how we can heal ourselves and grow up."
- Steven Forrest, author of The Inner Sky and The Changing Sky
http://www.authorho use.com/BookStor e/ItemDetail~ bookid~41780. aspx
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- - 
Shop for a Donation at Al-Awda!
Interested in furthering your knowledge about Palestine 
and its people? 
Want to help make the Palestinian Right to Return a reality?
Looking for ways to show your support for Palestine and 
Palestinian refugees? 
Why not shop for a donation at Al-Awda 
http://al-awda. org/shop. html 
and help support a great organization and cause!!
Al-Awda offers a variety of educational materials including interesting 
and unique books on everything from oral histories, photo books 
on Palestinian refugees, to autobiographies, narratives, political 
analysis, and culture. We also have historical maps of Palestine 
(in Arabic and English), educational films, flags of various sizes, 
and colorful greeting cards created by Palestinian children. 
You can also show your support for a Free Palestine, and wear with 
pride, great looking T-shirts, pendants, and a variety of Palestine pins.
Shop for a Donation at Al-Awda!
Visit http://al-awda. org/shop. html for these great items, and more!
The Educational Supplies Division
Al-Awda, The Palestine Right to Return Coalition
PO Box 131352
Carlsbad, CA 92013, USA
Tel: 760-685-3243
Fax: 360-933-3568
E-mail: info@al-awda. org
WWW: http://al-awda. org
Al-Awda, The Palestine Right to Return Coalition (PRRC), is a broad-
based, non-partisan, democratic, and charitable organization of 
grassroots activists and students committed to comprehensive public 
education about the rights of all Palestinian refugees to return to their 
homes and lands of origin, and to full restitution for all their confiscated 
and destroyed property in accordance with the Universal Declaration 
of Human Rights, International law and the numerous United Nations 
Resolutions upholding such rights (see FactSheet). Al-Awda, PRRC 
is a not for profit tax-exempt educational and charitable 501(c)(3) 
organization as defined by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) of the 
United States of America. Under IRS guidelines, your donations 
to Al-Awda, PRRC are tax-deductible.
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- - 
Before You Enlist
Excellent flash film that should be shown to all students.
http://www.youtube. com/watch? v=ZFsaGv6cefw
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
QUOTE OF THE DAY:
In an interview in March 1995 entitled, "Jesse Helms: Setting the 
Record Straight" that appeared in the Middle East Quarterly, Helms 
said, "I have long believed that if the United States is going to give 
money to Israel, it should be paid out of the Department of Defense 
budget. My question is this: If Israel did not exist, what would 
U.S. defense costs in the Middle East be? Israel is at least the 
equivalent of a U.S. aircraft carrier in the Middle East. Without 
Israel promoting its and America's common interests, we would 
be badly off indeed."
(Jesse Helms was the senior senator from North Carolina and the 
chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee at the time.)
http://www.meforum. org/article/ 244
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
TWO AMICUS BRIEFS FILED FOR MUMIA ABU-JAMAL WITH 
THE 3RD CIRCUIT FEDERAL APPEALS COURT IN JULY 2006
These pdf files can be found on Michael Schiffmann's web site at: 
http://againstthecr imeofsilence. de/english/ copy_of_mumia/ legalarchive/
The first brief is from the National Lawyers Guild. 
The second brief is from the NAACP Legal Defense 
and Educational Fund, Inc.
Howard Keylor
For the Labor Action Committee to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal
www.laboractionmumi a.org.
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
SIR! NO SIR!
I urge everyone to get a copy of "Sir! No Sir!" at:
http://www.sirnosir .com/
It is an extremely informative and powerful film
of utmost importance today. I was a participant
in the anti-Vietnam war movement. What a 
powerful thing it was to see troops in uniform
leading the march against the war! If you would
like to read more here are two very good
publications:
Out Now!: A Participant' s Account of the Movement 
in the United States Against the Vietnam War 
by Fred Halstead (Hardcover - Jun 1978)
and:
GIs speak out against the war;: The case of the 
Ft. Jackson 8; by Fred Halstead (Unknown Binding - 1970).
Both available at:
http://www.amazon. com/gp/search/ 103-1123166- 0136605?search- alias=books& rank=
+availability, -proj-total- margin&field- author=Fred% 20Halstead
In solidarity,
Bonnie Weinstein
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
Endorse the following petition:
Don't Let Idaho Kill Endangered Wolves
Target: Fish and Wildlife Service
Sponsor: Defenders of Wildlife
http://www.thepetit ionsite.com/ takeaction/ 664280276?
z00m=99090&z00m= 99090<l= 1155834550
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
END ALL U.S. AID TO ISRAEL!
Stop funding Israel's war against Palestine
Complete the form at the website listed below with your information.
Personalize the message text on the right with 
your own words, if you wish.
Click the Next Step button to send your letter 
to these decision makers:
President George W. Bush
Vice President Richard 'Dick' B. Cheney
Your Senators
Your Representative
Go here to register your outrage:
https://secure2. convio.net/ pep/site/ Advocacy?
JServSessionIdr003= cga2p2o6x1. app2a&cmd= display&page= UserAction& id=177
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
Idriss Stelley Foundation is in critical financial crisis, please help !
ISF is in critical financial crisis, and might be forced to close 
its doors in a couple of months due to lack of funds to cover 
DSL, SBC and utilities, which is a disaster for our numerous 
clients, since the are the only CBO providing direct services 
to Victims (as well as extended failies) of police misconduct 
for the whole city of SF. Any donation, big or small will help 
us stay alive until we obtain our 501-c3 nonprofit Federal 
Status! Checks can me made out to 
ISF, ( 4921 3rd St , SF CA 94124 ). Please consider to volunteer 
or apply for internship to help covering our 24HR Crisis line, 
provide one on one couseling and co facilitate our support 
groups, M.C a show on SF Village Voice, insure a 2hr block 
of time at ISF, moderate one of our 26 websites for ISF clients !
http://mysite. verizon.net/ vzeo9ewi/ idrissstelleyfou ndation/
http://groups. yahoo.com/ group/isf23/
Report Police Brutality
24HR Bilingual hotline
(415) 595-8251
http://groups. yahoo.com/ group/Justice4As a/
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
Appeal for funds:
Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches 
Visit the Dahr Jamail Iraq website http://dahrjamailir aq.com 
Request for Support
Dahr Jamail will soon return to the Middle East to continue his
independent reporting. As usual, reporting independently is a costly
enterprise; for example, an average hotel room is $50, a fixer runs $50
per day, and phone/food average $25 per day. Dahr will report from the
Middle East for one month, and thus needs to raise $5,750 in order to
cover his plane ticket and daily operating expenses.
A rare opportunity has arisen for Dahr to cover several stories
regarding the occupation of Iraq, as well as U.S. policy in the region,
which have been entirely absent from mainstream media.
With the need for independent, unfiltered information greater than ever,
your financial support is deeply appreciated. Without donations from
readers, ongoing independent reports from Dahr are simply not possible.
All donations go directly towards covering Dahr's on the ground
operating expenses.
(c)2006 Dahr Jamail.
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
Legal update on Mumia Abu-Jamal's case 
Excerpts from a letter written by Robert R. Bryan, the lead attorney 
for death row political prisoner, Mumia Abu-Jamal. 
...On July 20, 2006, we filed the Brief of Appellee and Cross 
Appellant, Mumia Abu-Jamal, in the U.S. Court of Appeals 
for the Third Circuit, Philadelphia. 
http://www.workers. org/2006/ us/mumia- 0810/
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
Today in Palestine! 
For up to date information on Israeli's brutal attack on
human rights and freedom in Palestine and Lebanon go to:
http://www.theheadl ines.org
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
Oklahoma U's First African-American Speaker
Dear Representative Johnson:
 
Congratulations on your bill for creating an 
African-American Centennial Plaza near the 
Capitol.
 
I have a suggestion for including an important 
moment in Oklahoma African-American
history in the displays.
 
The first African-American speaker at the 
University of Oklahoma was Paul Boutelle,
in 1967.
 
He is still alive but has changed his name 
to Kwame Somburu.  I believe it would be
very appropriate also to invite Mr. Somburu 
to attend the dedication ceremony for
this plaza.   I correspond with him by email.
 
Here is a 1967 Sooner magazine article about his appearance:
http://digital.libraries.ou.edu/sooner/articles/p25-27_1967v40n2_OCR.pdf
Sincerely,
 
Mike Wright
Norman
329-6688
 
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
THE HIDDEN HISTORY OF ZIONISM
BY RALPH SCHOENMAN
Essential reading for understanding the development of Zionism 
and Israel in the service of British and USA imperialism. 
The full text of the book can be found for free at: 
http://takingaim. info/hhz/ index.htm
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
JOIN THE LYNNE STEWAR DEFENSE - THE CASE IS NOT OVER!
For those of you who don't know who Lynne Stewart is, go to 
www.lynnestewart. org and get acquainted with Lynne and her 
cause. Lynne is a criminal defense attorney who is being persecuted 
for representing people charged with heinous crimes. It is a bedrock 
of our legal system that every criminal defendant has a right to a 
lawyer. Persecuting Lynne is an attempt to terrorize and intimidate 
all criminal defense attorneys in this country so they will stop 
representing unpopular people. If this happens, the fascist takeover 
of this nation will be complete. We urge you all to go the website, 
familiarize yourselves with Lynne and her battle for justice
www.lynnestewart. org
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
NATIONAL COMMITTEE TO FREE THE CUBAN FIVE
Comité Nacional por la Libertad de los Cinco Cubanos
Who are the Cuban Five?
The Cuban Five are five Cuban men who are in U.S. prison, serving 
four life sentences and 75 years collectively, after being wrongly 
convicted in U.S. federal court in Miami, on June 8, 2001. 
They are Gerardo Hernández, Ramón Labañino, Antonio Guerrero, 
Fernando González and René González.
The Five were falsely accused by the U.S. government of committing 
espionage conspiracy against the United States, and other related 
charges.
But the Five pointed out vigorously in their defense that they were 
involved in monitoring the actions of Miami-based terrorist groups, 
in order to prevent terrorist attacks on their country of Cuba.
The Five's actions were never directed at the U.S. government. 
They never harmed anyone nor ever possessed nor used any 
weapons while in the United States.
The Cuban Five's mission was to stop terrorism
For more than 40 years, anti-Cuba terrorist organizations based 
in Miami have engaged in countless terrorist activities against 
Cuba, and against anyone who advocates a normalization 
of relations between the U.S. and Cuba. More than 3,000 Cubans 
have died as a result of these terrorists' attacks.
Gerardo Hernández, 2 Life Sentences
Antonio Guerrero, Life Sentence
Ramon Labañino, Life Sentence
Fernando González, 19 Years
René González, 15 Years
Free The Cuban Five Held Unjustly In The U.S.!
http://www.freethef ive.org/
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
Eyewitness Account from Oaxaca
A website is now being circulated that has up-to-date info 
and video that can be downloaded of the police action and 
developments in Oaxaca. For those who have not seen it 
elsewhere, the website is: 
www.mexico.indymedi a.org/oaxaca 
http://www.mexico. indymedia. org/oaxaca
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
REMINDER TO ALL GROUPS: BE SURE AND POST ALL ACTIONS AND
EVENTS TO WWW.INDYBAY. ORG TO REACH THE MOST PEOPLE
AGAINST THE WAR IN THE BAY AREA!
http://www.indybay. org
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- - 
Iraq Body Count 
For current totals, see our database page.
http://www.iraqbody count.net/ press/pr13. php
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- - 
The Cost of War
[Over three-hundred- billion so far...bw]
http://nationalprio rities.org/ index.php? optionfiltered=com_ wrapper&Itemid= 182
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
"The Democrats always promise to help workers, and the don't!
The Republicans always promise to help business, and the do!"
- Mort Sahl
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
"It's better to die on your feet than to live on your knees." 
- Emilano Zapata
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
Join the Campaign to 
Shut Down the Guantanamo Torture Center
Go to: 
http://www.shutitdo wn.org/
to send a letter to Congress and the White House: 
Shut Down Guantanamo and all torture centers and prisons.
A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition
Act Now to Stop War & End Racism
http://www.ANSWERco alition.org http://www.actionsf .org
sf@internationalans wer.org
2489 Mission St. Rm. 24
San Francisco: 415-821-6545
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
Great Counter-Recruitment Website
http://notyoursoldi er.org/article. php?list= type&type= 14
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
DEFEND IMMIGRANT RIGHTS AND 
CIVIL RIGHTS!
Last summer the U.S. Border Patrol arrested Shanti Sellz and 
Daniel Strauss, both 23-year-old volunteers assisting immigrants 
on the border, for medically evacuating 3 people in critical 
condition from the Arizona desert.
Criminalization for aiding undocumented immigrants already 
exists on the books in the state of Arizona. Daniel and Shanti 
are targeted to be its first victims. Their arrest and subsequent 
prosecution for providing humanitarian aid could result in 
a 15-year prison sentence. Any Congressional compromise 
with the Sensenbrenner bill (HR 4437) may include these 
harmful criminalization provisions. Fight back NOW!
Help stop the criminalization of undocumented immigrants 
and those who support them!
For more information call 415-821- 9683. 
For information on the Daniel and Shanti Defense Campaign, 
visit www.nomoredeaths. org. 
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- - 
FYI
According to "Minimum Wage History" at 
http://oregonstate. edu/instruct/ anth484/minwage. html " 
"Calculated in real 2005 dollars, the 1968 minimum wage was the 
highest at $9.12. "The 8 dollar per hour Whole Foods employees 
are being paid $1.12 less than the 1968 minimum wage.
"A federal minimum wage was first set in 1938. The graph shows 
both nominal (red) and real (blue) minimum wage values. Nominal 
values range from 25 cents per hour in 1938 to the current $5.15/hr. 
The greatest percentage jump in the minimum wage was in 1950, 
when it nearly doubled. The graph adjusts these wages to 2005 
dollars (blue line) to show the real value of the minimum wage. 
Calculated in real 2005 dollars, the 1968 minimum wage was the 
highest at $9.12. Note how the real dollar minimum wage rises and 
falls. This is because it gets periodically adjusted by Congress. 
The period 1997-2006, is the longest period during which the 
minimum wage has not been adjusted. States have departed from 
the federal minimum wage. Washington has the highest minimum 
wage in the country at $7.63 as of January 1, 2006. Oregon is next 
at $7.50. Cities, too, have set minimum wages. Santa Fe, New 
Mexico has a minimum wage of $9.50, which is more than double 
the state minimum wage at $4.35."
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- - 
NO BORDERS! NO WALLS! NO FENCES! GENERAL AMNESTY FOR ALL!
OUR HOMELAND IS WHERE WE LIVE! 
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- - 
REPEAL THE NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND ACT IN 2007!
Check out: 10 EXCELLENT REASONS NOT TO JOIN THE MILITARY
http://www.10reason sbook.com/
Public Law print of PL 107-110, the No Child Left Behind 
Act of 2001 [1.8 MB] 
http://www.ed. gov/policy/ elsec/leg/ esea02/index. html
Also, the law is up before Congress again in 2007. 
See this article from USA Today:
Bipartisan panel to study No Child Left Behind
By Greg Toppo, USA TODAY
February 13, 2006
http://www.usatoday .com/news/ education/ 2006-02-13- education- panel_x.htm 
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- - 
The Declaration of Independence of the Thirteen Colonies
http://www.law. indiana.edu/ uslawdocs/ declaration. html
http://www.law. ou.edu/hist/ decind.html
http://www.usconsti tution.net/ declar.html
http://www.indybay. org/news/ 2006/02/1805195. php
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- - 
Bill of Rights
http://www.law. cornell.edu/ constitution/ constitution. billofrights. html
http://www.indybay. org/news/ 2006/02/1805182. php
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- - 
ARTICLES IN FULL:
---------*-- -------*- --------* --------- *-------- -*------- -
1) Mexican Protesters Regroup in Oaxaca
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 12:10 p.m. ET
October 30, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/world/AP-Mexico-Oaxaca-Unrest.html?hp&ex=1162270800&en=49becb78d904ab60&ei=5094&partner=homepage
2) AWOL Soldier to Surrender at Fort Knox
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 2:00 p.m. ET
October 31, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-AWOL-Soldier-Surrender.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
3) Olmert Says Israel May Widen Military Role in Gaza
By GREG MYRE
October 31, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/31/world/middleeast/31mideast.html
4) Mexican Protesters Keep Their Message Alive, and on the Air
By MARC LACEY
October 31, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/31/world/americas/31mexico.html
5) At University for Deaf, Protesters Press Broader Demands
By DIANA JEAN SCHEMO
October 31, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/31/education/31gallaudet.html?ref=us
6) U.S. Drops Bid Over Royalties From Chevron
By EDMUND L. ANDREWS
WASHINGTON, Oct. 30 — The Interior Department has dropped 
claims that the Chevron Corporation systematically underpaid 
the government for natural gas produced in the Gulf of Mexico, 
a decision that could allow energy companies to avoid paying 
hundreds of millions of dollars in royalties.
October 31, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/31/business/31royalties.html?ref=business
7) Brad Will: Death in Oaxaca. An Obituary by David Rovics.
From: DRovics@aol.com     
Subject: My friend Brad Will has been shot to death in Oaxaca
 Date:    Oct 29, 2006 11:44 AM
 feel free to post and distribute.  for more information on the death of
brad will and the circumstances surrounding it, check out www.indymedia.org
and www.narconews.com.
8) The Dollar's Full-System Meltdown 
By Mike Whitney 
"The U.S. Dollar is kaput. Confidence in the currency 
is eroding by the day."
October 30, 2006
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15440.htm
9) After the Storm, Students Left Alone and Angry
By ADAM NOSSITER
November 1, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/01/education/01orleans.html?hp&ex=1162443600&en=52a60e9068142537&ei=5094&partner=homepage
10) An Activist, Then a Journalist, and Now a Victim 
of the Violence He Covered
By COLIN MOYNIHAN
November 1, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/01/nyregion/01activist.html
11) Gambling Against the Dollar
By DAVID LEONHARDT
November 1, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/01/business/01leonhardt.html?ref=business
12) U.S. Military Adopts Desperate Tactics
Inter Press Service
Dahr Jamail and Ali al-Fadhily
http://dahrjamailiraq.com
13) Substance in Red Wine Could Extend Life, Study Says
By NICHOLAS WADE
November 1, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/01/science/02winecnd.html?hp&ex=1162443600&en=e2387cca218a223b&ei=5094&partner=homepage
14) Israel Opens Fire During Mosque Standoff
By GREG MYRE
November 3, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/03/world/middleeast/04mideastcnd.html?hp&ex=1162616400&en=59140c6081ad22a0&ei=5094&partner=homepage 
15) Medicaid Wants Citizenship Proof for Infant Care
By ROBERT PEAR
November 3, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/03/washington/03medicaid.html?hp&ex=1162616400&en=4917802b9471b620&ei=5094&partner=homepage
16) Why Western workers are set to become poorer
31.10.2006
by Stephen Roach
http://www.moneyweek.com/file/20809/why-western-workers-are-set-to-become-poorer.html
17) How Bush's grandfather helped Hitler's rise to power
Rumours of a link between the US first family and the Nazi war  
machine have circulated for decades. Now the Guardian can reveal how  
repercussions of events that culminated in action under the Trading  
with the Enemy Act are still being felt by today's president
Ben Aris in Berlin and Duncan Campbell in Washington
Saturday September 25, 2004
The Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1312540,00.html
18) C.I.A. Wants Prison Tactics Secret
By SCOTT SHANE
November 4, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/04/us/04cia.html?hp&ex=1162702800&en=d6555a02fd066d9c&ei=5094&partner=homepage
19) German Detainee Questions His Country’s Role
By MARK LANDLER and SOUAD MEKHENNET
November 4, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/04/world/europe/04germany.html?ref=world
20) Abu Ghraib Abuser Won’t Be Redeployed
By REUTERS
November 4, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/04/world/middleeast/04canine.html
21) A Job Prospect Lures, Then Frustrates, Thousands
By ANTHONY RAMIREZ
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/04/nyregion/04jobs.html?ref=nyregion
22) Accessory for a U.S. Border Fence: 
A Welcome Mat for Foreign Loans
By FLOYD NORRIS
November 4, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/04/business/04charts.html
23) Give a Break to Americans Giving Birth
By M. P. DUNLEAVEY
November 4, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/04/business/04instincts.html
24) Army Recruiters Accused of Misleading 
Students to Get Them to Enlist
Colonel Says Incidents Are the Exception, Not the Rule
November 3, 2006
http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=2626032&page=1
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
1) Mexican Protesters Regroup in Oaxaca
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 12:10 p.m. ET
October 30, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/world/AP-Mexico-Oaxaca-Unrest.html?hp&ex=1162270800&en=49becb78d904ab60&ei=5094&partner=homepage
OAXACA, Mexico (AP) -- Strike-weary residents took to the streets 
Monday to thank federal police for intervening in violent demonstrations 
that had held their city hostage for months, but the demonstrators 
said they would take back the city center in their push for the 
governor's resignation.
Teachers had promised to end their five-month strike for higher 
wages and go back to work Monday, but no students returned 
to classes in the tense capital.
On Sunday, federal police tore down protest blockades and pushed 
demonstrators out of the main square that had served as their 
home base for five months.
The colonial city, a favorite of tourists, more closely resembled 
a battleground early Monday, with streets littered with charred 
cars and lines of federal police blocking some entrances 
to the main zocalo plaza.
The city was deeply divided between protesters demanding 
Gov. Ulises Ruiz's resignation and those wanting a return 
to the tranquil days when foreign tourists browsed shops 
and dined on the region's famous mole sauce.
Ignoring protesters who screamed ''Sellout!'' a group of about 
20 residents welcomed the police, touring streets and thanking 
authorities for taking control of the city.
''I don't want them to leave. Let them stay,'' Edith Mendoza, 
a 40-year-old housewife, said of the police. ''We were held 
hostage for five months.''
Before dawn Monday, federal police tore down the protesters' 
banners in the main square, mostly to wrap around themselves 
for warmth because they had been sent in without sleeping bags.
Riot police in body armor slept on sidewalks under the plaza's 
famous archways, rolled up against the chill night air in banners 
that once proclaimed people's power or demanded the resignation 
of the governor. Others sought warmth by burning bits of banners, 
wooden crates and other debris left behind by the protesters.
Interior Secretary Carlos Abascal said the federal forces would 
remain until order had been established and they were 
no longer needed.
There was still the threat of violence as protesters vowed to march 
on the zocalo. Police stationed water tanks in the four corners 
of the central plaza in preparation, and blocked anyone from 
entering.
The federal government's decision to send forces into Oaxaca 
came after teachers agreed to return to work by Monday, ending 
a strike that kept 1.3 million children out of classes across 
the southern state.
But Enrique Rueda, leader of the teachers' union, told The 
Associated Press that no students had returned to class 
in the capital on Monday, although some had in cities 
and towns outside of Oaxaca City.
While some teachers planned to return, others said they 
would stay home.
''We are not willing to go back (to work) until we get written 
guarantees'' for teachers' safety, said Daniel Reyes, one 
of the last of the striking teachers to leave the main square 
as police surrounded it Sunday night.
During the strike, some dissident teachers tried to open 
schools, and parents armed with sticks and pipes fought 
off protesters who tried to keep children from entering.
Public Safety Secretary Eduardo Medina Mora said seven 
police were injured in the weekend clashes. A few were 
hit by gasoline bombs thrown by protesters.
''There is no cause that justifies violence,'' he said.
Protesters claimed two of their own were killed, but federal 
authorities said they could not confirm that.
Protest spokesman Roberto Garcia said 50 supporters had 
been arrested and police were searching houses, looking 
for protest leaders.
A scattering of businesses, including the city's famous 
public marketplace, reopened Monday in an attempt 
to return to normal. As shoppers browsed through 
the market's stalls, stocked with supplies of marigolds 
to celebrate upcoming Day of the Dead celebrations, 
others lined up at bank machines. But most of the 
city remained shuttered.
''Today in Oaxaca social order and peace has been 
restored,'' President Vicente Fox said Monday.
Ruiz -- whom the protesters accuse of corruption 
and rigging elections -- was scheduled to give his 
state-of-the-state address on Monday.
He refused to resign, saying: ''This is not up for 
discussion. This is not the solution. The solution 
is the construction of agreements.''
Fox, who leaves office Dec. 1, resisted repeated 
calls to send federal forces to Oaxaca until Saturday, 
a day after gunfire killed a U.S. activist-journalist 
and two residents.
On the Net:
U.S. journalist's video (Spanish site): 
http://video.indymedia.org/en/2006/10/542.shtml
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
2) AWOL Soldier to Surrender at Fort Knox
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 2:00 p.m. ET
October 31, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-AWOL-Soldier-Surrender.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -- A U.S. Army soldier who fled to Canada rather 
than return to Iraq said Tuesday he was traveling to Fort Knox 
to surrender to military authorities.
Kyle Snyder, a former combat engineer, left the U.S. in April 2005 
while on leave to avoid a second deployment to Iraq.
''I don't see a lot of positive things coming from this war,'' 
Snyder told reporters Tuesday morning at a Louisville church. 
''I see it as a counterproductive mission.''
The 23-year-old from Colorado Springs, Colo., had trained 
as an engineer with the 94th Corps of Engineers, but he said 
he was put on patrol when he got to Iraq in 2004, something 
he said he wasn't trained to do.
Snyder said he began to turn against the war when he saw 
an innocent Iraqi man seriously wounded by American gunfire. 
He believed the shooting was not properly investigated.
Attorney James Fennerty said a deal has been reached to keep 
Snyder from being court-martialed. Instead, he said, Snyder 
will receive an other-than-honorable discharge.
That would be the same punishment received by another 
deserter, Darrell Anderson, 24, of Lexington, who surrendered 
at Fort Knox on Oct. 3. Anderson was held for three days 
while his case was processed, then released.
Fort Knox spokeswoman Gini Sinclair said she could 
not comment on Snyder's case, but she said deserters 
are typically brought back to the post and assigned 
to a special processing company and provided a lawyer. 
The Army would then open an investigation into the desertion.
''Each situation is evaluated individually,'' Sinclair said.
Snyder had fled to Canada while on leave from the Army 
and applied for refugee status. He said he worked as 
a welder and at a children's health clinic while there.
Snyder was nervous about returning and said he understood 
people may not agree with his decision to desert the Army.
''I don't know how the American people are going to take 
the things I say,'' he said Tuesday.
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
3) Olmert Says Israel May Widen Military Role in Gaza
By GREG MYRE
October 31, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/31/world/middleeast/31mideast.html
JERUSALEM, Oct. 30 — Prime Minister Ehud Olmert of Israel 
said Monday that the Israeli military might expand operations 
in the Gaza Strip in an attempt to halt Palestinian rocket fire, 
but that there was no intention to reoccupy the territory.
His comments came on another day of turmoil, in which Palestinian 
gunmen kidnapped a Spanish aid worker in southern Gaza 
and held him for several hours before releasing him, 
and a Palestinian militant was killed in northern Gaza in disputed 
circumstances. [Two more militants were killed in Gaza on Tuesday 
in clashes between Israeli troops and Hamas gunmen, 
Reuters reported.]
In a closed session with a parliamentary committee, Mr. Olmert 
was asked about the military’s plans for Gaza. Israeli forces, 
which re-entered the territory in late June after an Israeli soldier 
was seized, have been clashing with Palestinian militants almost 
daily. Several Israeli political and military officials have hinted 
recently that a larger operation could be coming.
A spokeswoman for Mr. Olmert, Miri Eisin, who was at the 
parliamentary session, quoted the prime minister as saying: 
“We aren’t going to reoccupy Gaza. But we will continue to fight 
terror, and there may be a change in the level of forces there 
at any given time.”
Mr. Olmert also said the military killed about 300 armed 
Palestinians in the past four months, according to Ms. Eisin. 
Monitoring groups have said that more than 250 Palestinians 
were killed during this time, about half militants and half 
civilians. Two Israeli soldiers have been killed in the fighting.
In Gaza City, Ismail Haniya, the Palestinian Authority prime 
minister, said, “We call on the international community 
to intervene immediately to halt the Israeli aggression.”
On Monday, Mazen Abu Oudah, 20, a member of Al Aksa 
Martyrs Brigades, was killed by Israeli fire near the northern 
Gaza town of Beit Hanun, according to Palestinian medical 
workers. However, the Israeli military said it had not been 
involved in any shooting in the area.
[The two militants killed Tuesday were shot during a military 
operation near the town of Khan Younis when Israeli troops 
fired on a group of militants who were trying to plant a bomb 
near the soldiers, an army spokeswoman told Reuters.]
Also, Palestinians fired two rockets into southern Israel 
on Monday, Israeli officials said, but they caused no damage 
or injuries.
Palestinian gunmen kidnapped Roberto Vila, 34, a Spaniard 
who works for a Spanish aid group, according to Palestinian 
officials and news media reports. He was freed unharmed 
late Monday night, according to Palestinian television.
In Israeli politics, Mr. Olmert’s cabinet and the Parliament 
approved the inclusion of Israel Beiteinu, a far-right party, 
in the governing coalition. Mr. Olmert’s coalition now 
controls 78 of the 120 seats in Parliament, a margin 
intended to make the government more stable.
However, with parties from the right, left and center, 
as well as a religious party, the coalition is so broad that 
the factions have little common ground on many issues, 
such as how to deal with the Palestinians.
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
4) Mexican Protesters Keep Their Message Alive, and on the Air
By MARC LACEY
October 31, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/31/world/americas/31mexico.html
OAXACA, Mexico, Oct. 30 — As the federal riot police hunkered down 
in Oaxaca’s main square on Monday, protesters sought to protect their 
not-so-secret weapon in their five-month siege of the city: the pilfered 
radio transmitter they use to mobilize the population.
“We are in a red alert, a red alert!” a nervous-sounding announcer 
said over and over from inside the bullet-scarred university station, 
which was ringed by sandbags and protected by masked supporters 
on the roof equipped with handmade mortars. “The police are moving in!”
The cry was premature, but it drew hundreds of supporters from 
across this city in southern Mexico. They prepared Molotov cocktails 
and reinforced the barriers around the gates of Oaxaca University 
in anticipation of a raid.
“We will transmit until the last minute,” an announcer who described 
himself as a law professor, but declined to provide his name, 
said in an interview. “We will not run. We are like the captains 
of the ship, and we’ll go down with the ship.”
Oaxaca State’s beleaguered governor, Ulises Ruiz, was also hunkered 
down, on his own turf. The federal police remained in control 
of the central square on Monday, but protesters marched through 
the rest of downtown, denouncing Mr. Ruiz and occasionally 
setting fire to vehicles.
Although the governor insisted in a television interview 
on Monday that he would not resign, his support appeared 
thin as both houses of the Congress passed nonbinding 
resolutions urging him to cede power for the good 
of the state and the nation.
In the Chamber of Deputies, only Mr. Ruiz’s Institutional 
Revolutionary Party, known as the PRI, and another small 
allied party stuck by the governor, and even that backing 
seemed lukewarm.
In the Senate, even the PRI joined in a statement urging 
Mr. Ruiz to “reconsider separating himself from charge, 
in order to contribute to the re-establishment of governability, 
normality and peace.”
But the governor said he was not budging. “I am governing 
Oaxaca,” he declared in a late-night news conference, 
dismissing the protesters as a relatively small group 
that did not represent the masses. “The questions 
of Oaxaca will be decided by Oaxacans.”
Mr. Ruiz said the arrival of federal troops had not 
resolved the crisis but might establish an environment 
where the opposing parties could resolve their differences 
at the negotiating table. As for the graffiti painted around 
town accusing the governor of being an assassin, 
he declared, “I don’t accept their views. I respect 
human rights.”
Members of the Oaxaca People’s Popular Assembly, which 
has been coordinating the protests, clearly disagree, 
as their frequent anti-Ruiz messages over the radio 
make clear.
If the diffuse movement that has laid siege to Oaxaca 
has a nerve center, it is the trash-strewn conference 
room where the group broadcasts regular updates 
to their comrades.
On Monday, the radio called people into the streets 
for three protest marches that drew thousands. 
Announcers also mourned three people who the 
protesters said had died in a raid on Sunday. 
The government said it had no information 
of any deaths at the hands of the police.
Even after the federal police raid managed 
to take back the symbolic Zócalo, or central 
square, the station kept the movement alive.
The protest began as a teachers’ strike, but a deal 
was reached to raise their salaries. Some teachers 
returned to classes on Monday, although it appeared 
that many were not sure it was safe to do so.
While the protest coalition consists of leftists, local 
residents have said that the issue is more a struggle 
to wrest control of the state from the PRI, the political 
party that once controlled all of Mexico, but whose 
national power has greatly diminished.
“It’s strange, but I’m not afraid,” Alejandra Canseco 
MartÃnez, 22, a student who frequently sends out updates 
over the airwaves, said from inside the radio station. 
“Maybe I should be afraid, because we don’t know what 
will happen and the police are only a few blocks away.”
It is not the first time that the station has been under siege.
The current standoff began June 14, when the police 
broke up a teachers’ protest and smashed the transmitter 
that the teachers had been using to broadcast their messages 
from the main square. The following day, as supporters joined 
forces with the teachers, university students took over the 
campus station.
On July 22, gunmen opened fire on the station, sending workers 
ducking for cover and eventually knocking the signal off the air. 
But listeners heard the attack and converged on the station 
in support.
On Aug. 8, someone sneaked into the station and poured acid 
onto the transmitter, again killing the signal. But by that time, 
protesters had taken over another station. Within weeks, 
a dozen public and private stations around Oaxaca were 
controlled by protesters.
However, the university station, with its transmitter repaired, 
remains the chief source of information for the protesters. 
Its messages are dismissed as revolutionary propaganda 
by critics, but supporters relish the hard-edge words that 
fly across the colonial city.
“The other stations only say things in support of Ulises,” 
said Sal Lozano, 43, a farmer, speaking of Mr. Ruiz, the 
governor. “We’re going to defend this station with everything 
we have.”
Antonio Betancourt contributed reporting from Oaxaca, 
and Elisabeth Malkin from Mexico City.
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
5) At University for Deaf, Protesters Press Broader Demands
By DIANA JEAN SCHEMO
October 31, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/31/education/31gallaudet.html?ref=us
WASHINGTON, Oct. 30 — A day after protesters at Gallaudet University, 
the world’s premier university for the deaf, prevailed in their battle 
to oust the incoming president, they pressed forward on Monday 
with their broader demands, saying that students must have 
a greater say in the search for a new president and that the 
next choice should be a more forceful advocate for deaf culture 
and a strong deaf identity.
“We are looking for a person who’s sensitive enough, who has 
respect for all cultures and for American Sign Language,” Noah 
Beckman, president of the student government, signed through 
an interpreter. Mr. Beckman said the new search process would 
have to demonstrate “inclusion, transparency and equality.”
On a sunny, spring-like afternoon, Mr. Beckman and other 
students packed up tents and sleeping bags that had filled campus 
front lawns in recent weeks. Gone were the signs deriding 
Dr. Jane K. Fernandes, the former provost who had been named 
to take over as president on Jan. 1, and I. King Jordan, the departing 
president, who had supported her.
Dr. Fernandes’s detractors said she lacked leadership ability 
and did not embrace the primacy of American Sign Language 
at Gallaudet and in deaf culture. And even though the panel 
that selected her included students and members of the 
faculty, many complained that their opinions had been 
overlooked and that the process was biased in her favor.
The university has never agreed that the process was not open.
In an e-mail message, the chairwoman of the Gallaudet 
board, Brenda Jo Brueggemann, said the board had taken 
many factors into account in deciding to revoke 
Dr. Fernandes’s contract.
“We had to think about safety on the Gallaudet campus,” 
she wrote.
“We had to think of Gallaudet’s unique role as an institution 
of higher education but also as a ‘center’ for the deaf community, 
nationally and even worldwide,” the message continued. 
“We had to think about the way that the situation clearly was 
not getting any better. We had to think about the financial and 
moral impact of the protests, especially as they continued, 
on the university and its constituents.”
Dr. Brueggemann said the board had not yet set parameters 
for the new search.
The board’s decision to drop its original candidate will 
complicate its next search, said Michael A. Baer, a partner 
at Isaacson, Miller, an executive search firm for colleges, 
universities and other public interest nonprofits. “There are 
a limited number of people available for them to consider, 
and it’s going to send a cautionary note to individuals who 
could be candidates,” Mr. Baer said.
Any future candidates will have to be attuned to the issues 
emerging in deaf culture, and the sensitivities involved, 
he said. In addition, the prolonged protest brought to the 
fore the latent discontent over a number of issues on campus, 
from the failure of many professors to use American Sign 
Language — the most accessible means of communication 
for many deaf people — to dissatisfaction that Gallaudet 
has not played more of an advocacy role for deaf rights 
in every area of life.
“The search committee and board’s awareness that they 
need to communicate with the entire campus community, 
in the long run, may strengthen the campus community,” 
Mr. Baer said.
Veterans of presidential searches at colleges and universities 
around the country said that in view of Dr. Fernandes’s ouster, 
the new search would have to give even greater weight to the 
views of faculty and students. In recent weeks, 82 percent 
of the faculty voted for Dr. Fernandes to resign or be removed.
Claire Van Ummersen, vice president in charge of the Center 
for Effective Leadership at the American Council on Education, 
which represents more than 1,800 colleges, universities 
and organizations involved in higher education, predicted 
that Gallaudet would not have trouble finding new candidates 
for the job.
The university, she said, is in a class by itself, as the world’s 
only liberal arts university for the deaf, and is highly prestigious.
In interviews on campus Monday, protesters said their victory 
had reinvigorated the struggle for deaf rights, pointing out that 
this was the second time deaf students had demanded, 
and won, a say in determining who would lead their university. 
Eighteen years ago, students forced the board to abandon 
its first choice of president, and to name Dr. Jordan 
as Gallaudet’s first deaf president in more than 100 years.
David Reynolds, an alumnus whose family is deaf three 
generations back, had driven from Indianapolis with his 
21-year-old twin sons, Jonathan and Justin, to join the 
protest. A teacher at the Indiana School for the Deaf, 
Mr. Reynolds said the new search must allow 
all groups to weigh in.
“We need the right visionary person,” Mr. Reynolds 
signed. “The whole thing here is don’t rush the process. 
That was the mistake the last time.”
Justin Reynolds, a Gallaudet student who was taking 
a semester off, said this weekend’s victory for the protesters 
signaled the ascent of deaf power. “From here on out, 
the world wants to know what we’ll do next,” Mr. Reynolds 
said. “With this unity, what are we capable of?”
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
6) U.S. Drops Bid Over Royalties From Chevron
By EDMUND L. ANDREWS
WASHINGTON, Oct. 30 — The Interior Department has dropped 
claims that the Chevron Corporation systematically underpaid 
the government for natural gas produced in the Gulf of Mexico, 
a decision that could allow energy companies to avoid paying 
hundreds of millions of dollars in royalties.
October 31, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/31/business/31royalties.html?ref=business
WASHINGTON, Oct. 30 — The Interior Department has dropped claims 
that the Chevron Corporation systematically underpaid the government 
for natural gas produced in the Gulf of Mexico, a decision that could 
allow energy companies to avoid paying hundreds of millions 
of dollars in royalties.
The agency had ordered Chevron to pay $6 million in additional 
royalties but could have sought tens of millions more had it prevailed. 
The decision also sets a precedent that could make it easier for oil and 
gas companies to lower the value of what they pump each year from 
federal property and thus their payments to the government.
Interior officials said on Friday that they had no choice but to drop 
their order to Chevron because a department appeals board had ruled 
against auditors in a separate case.
But state governments and private landowners have challenged the 
company over essentially the same practices and reached settlements 
in which the company has paid $70 million in additional royalties.
In a written statement, the department’s Minerals Management 
Service said it would have been useless to fight Chevron.
“It is not in the public interest to spend federal dollars pursuing 
claims that have little or no chance of success,” the agency said. 
“M.M.S. lost a contested and controversial issue” before the appeals 
board. “Had we simply wanted to capitulate to ‘big oil,’ the agency 
would not have issued the order in the first place.”
Chevron said in a written statement that it “endeavors to calculate 
and pay its oil and gas royalties correctly,” and it said that 
the Interior Department had agreed.
The agency notified Chevron of its decision in a confidential 
letter on Aug. 3, which The New York Times obtained recently 
under the Freedom of Information Act.
The reversal in the case, which involves Chevron’s accounting 
of natural gas sales to a company it partly owned, has renewed 
criticism that the Bush administration is reluctant to confront oil 
and gas companies and is lax in collecting royalties.
“The government is giving up without a fight,” said Richard T. Dorman, 
a lawyer representing private citizens suing Chevron over its federal 
royalty payments. “If this decision is left standing, it would result 
in the loss of tens of millions, if not hundreds of millions, of dollars 
in royalties owed by other companies.”
In return for the right to drill on federal lands and in federal waters, 
energy companies are required to pay the government a share 
of their proceeds. Last year, businesses producing natural gas 
paid $5.15 billion in government royalties.
But the Bush administration has come under fire on Capitol Hill 
for its record on collecting payments. While the Interior 
Department has sweetened incentives for exploration and 
pushed to open wilderness areas for drilling, it has also cut 
back on full-scale audits of companies intended to make 
sure they are paying their full share.
Administration officials knew that dozens of companies had 
incorrectly claimed exemptions from royalties since 2003, but 
they waited until December 2005 to send letters demanding 
about $500 million in repayments.
In February, the Interior Department acknowledged that 
oil companies could escape more than $7 billion in payments 
because of mistakes in leases signed in the 1990s. Top officials 
are trying to renegotiate those deals, but some Republicans 
and Democrats have complained that the administration 
is dragging its feet.
In addition, four government auditors last month publicly 
accused the Interior Department of blocking their efforts 
to recover more than $30 million from the Shell Oil Corporation, 
the Kerr-McGee Corporation and other major companies.
“This latest revelation proves that the Bush administration 
is incapable of preventing big oil companies from cheating 
taxpayers,” said Representative Edward J. Markey 
of Massachusetts, a senior Democrat on the House 
Committee on Resources. “The public has been systematically 
fleeced out of royalties that these companies owe for the privilege 
of drilling for oil and gas on lands belonging to all of us.”
The Chevron case offers a glimpse into what is normally 
a secretive process. To protect what energy companies consider 
proprietary information, the Interior Department does not 
announce that it is accusing companies of underpaying 
royalties nor does it announce its settlements in these disputes. 
The government also does not disclose how much money each 
company pays in royalties.
In theory, companies are required to pay the government a royalty 
of 12 percent to 16 percent of their sales. In practice, the definition 
of sales is as convoluted as a Rubik’s Cube.
In the Chevron case, auditors in the Minerals Management Service
were addressing an issue that had bedeviled royalty enforcement 
for decades: How does the government make sure it gets its due 
when companies sell natural gas to businesses they partly own?
In 1996, Chevron sold its holdings in more than 50 processing 
plants to Dynegy in exchange for a 26 percent stake in the natural 
gas company, which is based in Houston. For the next seven years, 
Chevron sold virtually all its domestic natural gas to Dynegy 
for processing.
In their original accusations, dating to 2001, the auditors asserted 
that Chevron had understated sales, and hence its royalty 
obligations, by inflating costs for processing gas at Dynegy.
Companies are allowed to deduct processing costs from their 
sales revenues when they calculate their royalty obligations. 
Processing involves separating water and a variety of liquid 
fuels like propane and methane from raw natural gas. The 
auditors’ accusations were not unique. State officials in New 
Mexico challenged Chevron over the same issue — “non-
arms-length” deals, as regulators call them — and Chevron 
agreed to pay $10.4 million in extra royalties without admitting 
wrongdoing. Private property owners who leased land to Chevron 
sued over the same issue in Oklahoma, and the company paid 
$60 million last year to settle out of court.
“The natural gas processing business lends itself almost 
uniquely to chicanery,” said Spencer Hosie, a lawyer who has 
represented the states of Louisiana and Alaska in several court 
fights over oil and gas royalties. “It is a complicated and opaque 
business, and there are many opportunities to shade judgments 
and numbers.”
From 2001 to 2003, after detailed audits of several Chevron 
leases, the Interior Department said the company was reducing 
its “sales value” by exaggerating processing costs at six 
of Dynegy’s many plants. At one plant, auditors estimated 
Chevron had claimed five times the actual costs.
At first glance, the suspected underpayments seemed trivial: 
about $6 million out of hundreds of millions in royalties. 
But the audits were limited to only a handful of plants. Had 
the Interior Department pressed its claims successfully, 
it could have recovered money tied to all the other plants, 
and for other years.
Chevron paid the $6 million but appealed. The file in that 
case now runs more than 900 pages, most of it still off-limits 
to the public.
Mr. Hosie, who represented Louisiana in a lawsuit that led 
to a $100 million verdict against Chevron over underpaid 
oil royalties, expressed surprise at the federal government’s 
decision in the natural gas case.
“Is it even remotely likely that oil companies systematically 
underpay private royalty owners and state governments, 
but pay the federal government perfectly properly?” 
Mr. Hosie asked. “Isn’t it more likely they are underpaying 
everybody?”
A Chevron spokesman, Donald Campbell, said laws regulating 
state and private leases often differed significantly from those 
of the federal government. “The rules governing valuation vary 
from jurisdiction to jurisdiction,” Mr. Campbell said in a statement.
Chevron argued that New Mexico’s rules presumed that a deal 
was “not at arms length” — and that costs had to be calculated 
differently — if one company owned 10 percent to 50 percent 
of the other. The federal regulations, Chevron said, required 
auditors to consider additional factors before making such 
a determination. Because of a backlog, the appeals board had 
not considered Chevron’s appeal when Interior Department 
officials decided they could not win. But if the appeals board 
had overruled the auditors, federal regulations would have 
allowed the interior secretary to let a federal court decide 
the issue.
In their letter to Chevron, department officials did not say the 
underlying facts had changed. Rather, they noted that the agency’s 
Board of Land Appeals had rejected similar accusations about 
non-arm’s-length agreements involving two other companies, 
Vastar Resources and Southern Companies.
The appeals board ruled in 2005 that the Minerals Management 
Service had failed to show that Vastar had any real control over 
a partnership it had formed with Southern to sell its gas. 
The board said Vastar had provided “uncontroverted evidence” 
that the sales prices had been negotiated at arm’s length 
between companies with “opposing economic interests.”
But the Chevron case differed in several important ways.
The government never audited Vastar in reaching its conclusions 
and had provided a largely theoretical opinion when the company 
asked for guidance. By contrast, auditors had scrutinized Chevron, 
which is based in San Ramon, Calif., and Dynegy and backed their 
arguments with supporting data.
Chevron’s ties with Dynegy also appeared to be closer than those 
between the other companies. Chevron described Dynegy 
as an affiliate in some reports to shareholders. Chevron was 
also Dynegy’s biggest supplier of raw natural gas, its biggest 
customer for gas processing and one of its biggest for processing 
byproducts like propane and methane.
Administration officials said they had “carefully reviewed” 
similarities and differences between the cases, but offered 
little elaboration.
“We recognize that other parties may assert various arguments 
regarding the relationship between the Vastar and Chevron 
situations,” the Minerals Management Service said in its written 
response to questions, “but the agency’s evaluation and 
deliberative processes are privileged.”
John Bemis, the assistant commissioner for gas and minerals 
in New Mexico, said his state was challenging a growing 
number of such alliances. In addition to the $10.4 million 
royalty settlement with Chevron, New Mexico persuaded 
ConocoPhillips to settle a similar case in August for $9.5 
million and is negotiating with BP in a third case.
Interior Department officials have shown little interest 
in evidence from either New Mexico’s experience or 
a current court fight with Chevron over federal royalties.
On July 11, three weeks before the department dropped its 
case against Chevron, Mr. Dorman and other lawyers involved 
in a Texas lawsuit against Chevron wrote to Interior Department 
officials. The lawyers, who represent a whistle-blower seeking 
to recover money for the federal government, said they were 
suing Chevron over the same issues the department had raised.
“All we were saying was that they should wait to see what 
evidence we turned up, and that we would gladly share 
everything we had with them,” Mr. Dorman said. His firm 
faxed a letter to the policy appeals division. Getting 
no response, the lawyers sent a copy by U.P.S. Six days 
later, it was returned. The reason, according to the U.P.S. 
label: “Receiver did not want, refused delivery.”
The agency confirmed in a statement that it knew of the 
lawyers’ case. Asked why it refused to accept their letter, 
the Minerals Management Service said it could not comment 
“because these matters are the subject of pending litigation.”
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
7) Brad Will: Death in Oaxaca. An Obituary by David Rovics.
From: DRovics@aol.com     
Subject: My friend Brad Will has been shot to death in Oaxaca
 Date:    Oct 29, 2006 11:44 AM
 feel free to post and distribute.  for more information on the death of
brad will and the circumstances surrounding it, check out www.indymedia.org
and www.narconews.com.
 brad will was a dear friend, and a true revolutionary.  he died the way
countless and uncounted numbers of beautiful people have died in recent
centuries -- he was shot in the chest by rightwing paramilitaries.  he was
filming the scene around one of thousands of barricades that have shut down
oaxaca city since last june, when the governor there tried to ban public
expressions of dissent, thus throwing one more historical spark into one
more historical powder keg.
 brad embodied the spirit of indymedia.  he was not just covering stories
that the "mainstream" press ignores, such as the exciting, violent
revolutionary moment which has gripped oaxaca for several months now.  brad
was not risking his life to get a good shot of a confrontation at a
barricade because he might get a photo on the cover of a newspaper, get some
(perhaps well-deserved) fame and money -- he was posting his communiques on
indymedia, for free.
 sure, brad was filming in order to cover history.  but he was there also
to make history.  brad knew that a camera is a weapon, or hopefully a shield
of some sort, and sometimes can serve to de-escalate a situation, to protect
people from being violated, beaten, killed.  and brad knew that if the
independent media didn't document history, nobody else would.
 brad deeply appreciated the power of music and culture.  if he didn't have
a camera in his hands, he often had a guitar.!   d uring some of his many
travels around latin america he wrote emails to me about the musicians he
met, with whom he shared my songs and recordings.  he particularly liked my
song "saint patrick battalion," and reportedly shared his rendition of it
with lots of people.  he would not live to know just how much his life and
death would resemble the san patricios, who died fighting for mexico during
the first u.s. invasion of that country in the 1840's.
 through all brad did and saw on large swaths of three different
continents, he somehow continually brought with him a boundless enthusiasm
and obvious love of life, love, a good party, or a good riot.  he was my
favorite kind of person, my favorite kind of revolutionary -- the sort who
is just as comfortable talking about revolutionary theory, current events,
music, relationships or smoking a bowl on a manhattan rooftop at sunset.
the kind of person who is alive, in mind, body and spirit, in equal
proportions.
 brad became a radical long before it was briefly fashionable in the u.s.
(with the wto protests in seattle), and long since it became unfashionable
there (september 11th, 2001).  the kinds of tactics and politics that the
global justice movement became briefly known for were practiced by people
like brad in the squatters' movement in new york city and the radical
environmental movement on the west coast in the 1990's.  brad was in both
places and many more.  brad was somewhere near the ground floor of many
other more recent anarchist institutions -- food not bombs, critical mass,
reclaim the streets, guerrilla gardening, indymedia.  he saw the
connections, deeply understood the concept of "the commons," and went for
it, as an activist, a videojournalist, a musician and a cheerleader.
 i never knew brad's last name until he was murdered.  for me he was just
brad.  in my cell phone he was "brad ! nyc" (to distinguish him from another
good friend named brad, who lives in baltimore).  i don't remember talking
with him much about his past, where he grew up, how he became a
revolutionary, though we may have talked about that sort of thing.  but
generally i saw him in the course of events, whether it was a film
showing/concert on a brooklyn rooftop, a land occupation in the bronx, or,
just as often, a large demonstration against an evil financial institution
somewhere in the world.
 i've sung at many such events, and brad has been at most of them -- and
he's been present at many which i didn't make it to.  they're all such a
blur, i don't remember which ones anymore.  but the many encounters always
start out with a warm smile and a hug, and usually involve some kind of
chaos going on, with brad comfortably in the middle of it.  sometimes -- all
too rarely, i suddenly realize -- the encounters would continue after the
chaos subsided, and we could be in a quiet place with a small group of
people, chilling and talking about life, my favorite bits.
 there have been many debates about whether it is more useful to organize
large events or to focus on community organizing locally.  whether to focus
on recording history or making it.  whether to educate or to act.  whether
to have a party or have a meeting.  brad clearly decided that the correct
answer is "all of the above."  the reality of this is easy to demonstrate -- 
talk to anybody in new york city involved with just about any aspect of the
progressive movement.  it's a city of 8 million people, but if they are
serious participants in the more grassroots end of the movement, they know
brad.  though they may not have known his last name.  he's just brad, the
tall, thin guy with long hair who is often flashing a warm, gentle smile
with a compassionate, intelligent glint in his eye.  he's often ! describe d
with a connector like "brad from indymedia" or "brad from more gardens" or
"brad the musician."
 i haven't seen him in a while.  several months at least.  but suddenly i
miss him so much.  i miss hanging out with him in the lower east side,
chilling at his place there, swapping stories.  i miss the rejuvinating
warmth of his presence.  i miss the unspoken, mutual admiration.  i miss the
feeling that i was in the presence of someone who so deeply felt his
connection to the world.  the feeling that here was someone who would die
for me, and me for him, no questions asked.  and now, like so many others
before him, he's done just that.
 like all of the rest of us, over the generations his memory will fade and
eventually disappear.  but for those of us alive today who had the honor of
being one of brad's large circle of friends, his memory will be with us
painfully, deeply, lovingly, until we all join him beneath the ground -- 
hopefully only after each of us has managed to have the kind of impact on
each other, on the movement, and the world that brad surely had in his short
36 years.
 David Rovics
 www.davidrovics.com
 www.soundclick.com/davidrovics
 www.myspace.com/davidrovics
 DRovics@aol.com
 (617) 872-5124
 P.O. Box 300995
 Jamaica Plain, MA 02130
 U$A
 Halliburton Boardroom Massacre CD/DVD now in a store near you, distributed
throughout North America and Europe! Please go to your local record store
and make sure they have some in stock! If they don't, they can order copies
through Caroline Distribution -- www.caroline.com (EMI).
 Halliburton Boardroom Massacre World Tour happening now! Check out
www.davidrovics.com for more information! 
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
8) The Dollar's Full-System Meltdown 
By Mike Whitney 
"The U.S. Dollar is kaput. Confidence in the currency 
is eroding by the day."
October 30, 2006
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15440.htm
A report in The Sydney Morning Herald stated, “Australia’s Treasurer 
Peter Costello has called on East Asia’s central bankers to ‘telegraph’ 
their intentions to diversify out of American investments and ensure 
an ‘orderly adjustment’….Central banks in China, Japan, Taiwan, 
South Korea, and Hong Kong have channeled immense foreign 
reserves into American government bonds, helping to prop 
up the US dollar and hold down interest rates,’ said Costello, 
but ‘the strategy has changed.’” 
Indeed, the strategy has changed. The world has come to its 
senses and is moving away from the green slip of paper that 
is currently mired in $8.3 trillion of debt. 
The central banks now want to reduce their USD reserves while 
trying to do as little damage to their own economies as possible. 
That’ll be difficult. If a sell-off ensues, it will start a stampede 
for the exits. 
There’s little hope of an “orderly adjustment” as Costello opines; 
that’s just false optimism. When the greenback begins listing; 
things will turn helter-skelter quickly. 
In September, we saw early signs that the dollar was in trouble. 
The trade deficit registered at $70 billion but the Net Foreign 
Security Purchases (NFSP) came in at a paltry $33 billion. That 
means that our main trading partners are no longer buying 
back our debt which puts downward pressure on the greenback. 
The Fed had two choices; either raise interest rates substantially 
or let the currency fall. Given the tenuous condition of the housing 
bubble and the proximity of the midterm elections, the Fed did neither. 
A month later, in October, the trade deficit hit $69.9 billion 
but, then, without warning, a miracle occurred. The Net Foreign 
Security Purchases skyrocketed to a “historic high” of $116.8 billion; 
covering both months’ shortfalls almost to the penny. 
Coincidence? 
Not likely. Either the skittish central banks decided to “stock up” 
on their dollar-denominated investments or the Federal Reserve 
(and their banking-buddies) is buying back its own debt to float 
us through the elections. 
This is exactly the kind of hanky-panky that people expected when 
Greenspan stopped publishing the M-3 last March keeping the rest 
of us in the dark about what was really going on with the money supply. 
Are we supposed to believe that the skeptical central banks suddenly 
doubled up on their T-Bills while they’re (publicly) moaning about 
the dollar’s weakness and threatening to diversify? 
That’s a stretch. 
According to the Wall Street Journal the Chinese Central-bank 
governor Zhou Xiaochuan stated unequivocally that “We think 
we’ve got enough.” The Chinese presently have nearly $1 trillion 
in USD and US Treasuries. 
“Enough”? 
The United States runs a $200 billion per year trade deficit with 
China. If they’ve “got enough” we’re dead-ducks. After all, it doesn’t 
take a sell-off to kill the dollar, just unwillingness on the part 
of the main players to stop purchasing at the same rate. 
Of course, everyone in Washington already knew that doomsday 
was approaching. That’s the way the system was designed from 
the very beginning. It’s all part of the madcap scheme to “starve 
the beast” and transfer the nation’s wealth to a handful of western 
plutocrats. That’s explains why the Fed and the White House whirred 
along like two spokes on the same wheel; every policy calculated 
to thrust the country headlong toward disaster. 
The administration never created a funding mechanism for the $400 
million tax cuts or for the 35% expansion of the Federal government. 
Defense spending increased by leaps and bounds as did the “no-bid” 
contracts for friends of the Bush clan. At the same time, interest rates 
were lowered to rock-bottom to put as much money as possible into 
the hands of people who couldn’t meet the traditional criteria for 
a mortgage. And, if gluttonous waste, reckless overspending and 
“Mickey Mouse” loans were not enough; the Fed capped it off 
by doubling the money supply in 7 years; a surefire prescription 
for hyper-inflation. 
So, which one of these policies was not deliberate? 
The financial crisis that we now face was created by design. It is intended 
to destroy the labor movement, crush the middle class, quash 
Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, reduce our foreign debt 
by 50 or 60%, force a restructuring of America’s debt, privatize 
all public assets and resources, and create a new regime of austerity 
measures which will divert more wealth to the banking 
and corporate establishments.
The avatars of neoliberalism invariably use crooked politicians 
to spawn enormous “unsustainable” debt so that the nations’ riches 
can be transferred to ruling elites. It works the same everywhere. 
It’s a form of corporate colonization, only this time the victim 
is the good old USA. 
“The Phase of Impact” 
According to Richard Daughty in his prescient article “The Phase 
of Impact” the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Dept have already 
manned the battle-stations. Here’s an excerpt: 
“Mr. Paulson, the Secretary of the Treasury, is, by virtue of his 
ascension to the throne, now the head of the shadowy President’s 
Working Group of Financial Markets (which was created 
by Presidential Order 12631) and he is insisting that they 
meet more often, namely every 6 weeks! 
This whole Working Group thing was originally set up as a fallback, 
ad-hoc, if-then defense to deal with possible economic emergencies, 
but now they are routinely meeting every 6 weeks. He has even 
ordered Jim Wilkinson, his chief of staff, to ‘oversee the creation 
of a Treasury Command Center to track markets world-wide and 
serve as an operations base in a crisis”! (Wall Street Journal) 
World-wide!! The American government is moving to take control 
of the world-wide economy as the result of an anticipated crisis? 
Yikes!” 
Daughty goes on to say: “So a lot of the hubbub is obviously being 
caused by some approaching upheaval, perhaps reflected in something 
sent to me by Phil S., which is the Global Europe Anticipation Bulletin 
No8 which reminded us that last May they predicted that the economy 
would have a ‘phase of acceleration’ that would begin in June, 
and it “would be spread out over a period of a maximum 
of 6 months’, which it subsequently did. They said then, 
and are saying again now, that a ‘phase of impact will begin 
in November 2006’, and that this impact phase would be the 
‘explosive phase of the crisis’. 
This ‘phase of impact’ that is due to begin momentarily is, they 
explain, ‘a period when a series of brutal crises starts affecting 
by contamination the total system. This explosive phase of the 
crisis, which will last 6 months to one year, will affect directly 
and very strongly financial players and markets, the owners 
of investment schemes with fixed incomes in dollars, pension 
funds and the strategic relations between the United States 
on the one side, and Europe and Asia on the other.” (Richard 
Daughty; “The Phase of Impact” Kitco.com) 
Predictions, of course, are rarely reliable and Daughty’s scenario 
may be a bit too apocalyptic for many. But if we accept the premise 
that the tax cuts, the expansion of the federal government, 
the doubling of the money supply, and the $10 trillion that 
was sluiced into the housing bubble were not merely “honest 
mistakes” made by “supply side” enthusiasts; then we must 
assume that this is all part of a loony plan to demolish the 
economic foundation-blocks of the current system and remake 
society from the ground up. 
Domestically, that plan appears to involve the activation 
of the police state. 
In the last few weeks the Bush administration has passed the 
Military Commissions Act of 2006 which allows the president 
to arrest and torture whomever he chooses without charging 
him with a crime. Also, unbeknownst to most Americans, Bush 
signed into law a provision which, according to Senator Patrick 
Leahy, will allow the president to unilaterally declare martial law. 
By changing The Insurrection Act, Bush has essentially overturned 
the Posse Comitatus Act which bars the president from deploying 
troops with the United States. The John Warner Defense 
Authorization Act of 2007 (as it is called) also allows Bush 
to take control of the National Guard which has always been 
under the purview of the state governors. Bush now has absolute 
power over all armed troops within the country, a state of affairs 
which the constitution purposely tried to prevent. The administration’s 
dream of militarizing the country under the sole authority 
of the executive has now been achieved although the public 
still has no idea that a coup that has taken place. 
Internationally, the falling dollar means that America’s debt 
will be reduced proportionate to the percentage-loss of the 
dollar in relation to other currencies. This is a great deal for 
the U.S. First the Fed prints fiat money to buy valuable resources 
and manufactured goods and then it nabs a discount by depreciating 
its currency. It’s a “win-win” situation for Washington, although 
it will undoubtedly cheat unwitting foreign-creditors out of their 
hard-earned profits. It’s doubtful that their interests will weigh 
very heavily on the money-lenders at the US Treasury or the 
Federal Reserve. 
The dollar faces a second crisis at home which is bound to play 
out throughout 2007. The $10 trillion dollar housing bubble 
is quickly losing air causing a precipitous drop in GDP. The housing 
industry is seeing its steepest decline in 30 years and home equity 
is beginning to shrivel. Housing has been the one bright spot in an 
otherwise bleak economic landscape. With the housing market slowing 
down and prices decreasing, the $600 billion of consumer spending 
which was extracted in 2005 from home equity will quickly evaporate 
triggering an overall slowdown in the economy. (Consumer 
spending is 70% of GDP) 
By the Fed’s own calculations; “The total amount of residential 
housing wealth in the US just about doubled between 1999 and 
2006 up from $10.4 trillion to $20.4 trillion. (“Times Online”) 
If these figures are accurate than we can assume that much 
of America’s “perceived” growth has been nothing more than 
the expansion of debt. In fact, that seems to be the case. Wages 
have been stagnant since the 1970s, 3 million manufacturing 
jobs have been outsourced, savings have shrunk to below 0%, 
and personal debt is soaring. We have become an “asset-based” 
society and when the principle asset begins to loose its value, 
we are in deep trouble. As housing prices continue to decline 
through 2007 we can expect a full-blown recession. If energy 
prices rear their ugly head again, (were they lowered for the 
elections?) it will just be that much worse. 
So, how will recession affect the dollar? 
Capital has no loyalties. It follows the markets. When America’s 
bustling consumer market stalls, we’ll undergo capital flight just 
like everywhere else. The 3 million lost manufacturing jobs, 
the 200,000 lost high-paying high-tech jobs, the tax incentives 
for major corporations doing business outside the country; 
all signal that corporate America has already loaded the boats 
and is headed for more promising markets in Asia and Europe. 
A sluggish consumer market could further weaken the dollar 
and force Americans to begin saving again but, (and here’s the 
surprising part) the decision-makers at the Federal Reserve and 
the Treasury Dept don’t really care if the face-value of the 
greenback goes down anyway. 
What really matters is that the dollar retains its position as the 
world’s reserve currency. That allows the Federal Reserve to 
continue to print the money, set the interest rates, and control 
the global economic system. The dollar presently accounts for 
66% of foreign currency reserves in central banks across the 
globe, an increase of nearly 10% in one decade alone. The dollar 
has become the international currency, a de-facto monopoly. 
This is the goal of the globalists and the American ruling elite 
who dream of one system, the dollar-system; with us running it. 
So, how will this cadre of plutocrats coerce the other nations to 
continue to use the dollar while it plummets from its perch? 
Oil. 
As long as oil is denominated in dollars, the central banks will 
be forced to stockpile American scrip regardless of its value. 
It’s no different than holding a gun to someone’s head. They will 
use our debt-plagued greenbacks or their cars and trucks will 
sputter, their tractors and factories will wheeze, and their 
economies will grind to a halt. It’s just that simple. 
America cannot maintain its superpower status unless it continues 
to control the global economic system. That means the linkage 
between the dollar and oil must be preserved. The Bush troupe 
sees this as an existential issue upon which the future of America’s 
ruling class depends. By 2020, 60% of the world’s oil will come from 
the Middle East. Bush will do everything in his power to control the 
resources of the Caspian Basin, thereby expanding US dollar-hegemony 
and paving the way for a new American century.
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9) After the Storm, Students Left Alone and Angry
By ADAM NOSSITER
November 1, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/01/education/01orleans.html?hp&ex=1162443600&en=52a60e9068142537&ei=5094&partner=homepage
NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 31 — John McDonogh High School has at least 
25 security guards, at the entrance, up the stairs and outside classes. 
The school has a metal detector, four police officers and four police 
cruisers on the sidewalk.
In the last six weeks, students at McDonogh, the largest functioning 
high school here, have assaulted guards, a teacher and a police 
officer. A guard and a teacher were beaten so badly that they 
were hospitalized.
The surge hints at a far-reaching phenomenon after Hurricane 
Katrina, educators here say. Teenagers in the city are living alone 
or with older siblings or relatives, separated by hundreds of miles 
from their displaced parents. Dozens of McDonogh students fend 
largely for themselves, school officials say.
“They are here on their own,” Wanda Daliet, a science teacher, said. 
“They are raising themselves. And they are angry.”
The principal, Donald Jackson, estimated that up to a fifth 
of the 775 students live without parents.
“Basically, they are raising themselves, because there is no authority 
figure in the home,” Mr. Jackson said. “If I call for a parent because 
I’m having an issue, I may be getting an aunt, who may be at the 
oldest 20, 21. What type of governance, what type of structure 
is in the home, if this is the living conditions?”
In a second-floor cosmetology class, two of the six girls said 
their parents were elsewhere.
“I don’t get to talk to her as much as I want,” one girl, Tiffany 
Mansion, 16, said as she looked down.
Her mother is in Little Rock, Ark.
In the lunchroom, a shy 18-year-old who was asked whom 
he went home to in the evenings, said: “Nobody. Myself.”
His parents are in Baton Rouge.
Mr. Jackson said many parents whom he had spoken to were 
in Baton Rouge, Houston or elsewhere. “That’s the question 
that’s buzzing in everybody’s heads,” the McDonogh curriculum 
coordinator, Toyia Washington Kendrick, said. “How could you 
leave your kids here, that are school-age kids, unattended?”
The answer is as various as the fragmented social structure, 
which the hurricane a year ago made even more complicated. 
Some students describe families barely functional even before 
the storm. Others say pressing economic necessity has kept 
parents away.
Rachelle Harrell was living in Houston, working as a medical 
assistant and trying to pay off a $1,300 electricity bill in New 
Orleans. But she yielded to her son Justin and his cousin 
Kiante, both 16, and sent them back to New Orleans 
on a Greyhound bus while she stayed in Texas.
The decision anguished Ms. Harrell, 36, even though Justin 
was being picked on in Houston and yearned to return 
to McDonogh. Justin; his sister, Eboni Gay, 18; and Kiante 
set up housekeeping in Ms. Harrell’s old house in the Algiers 
neighborhood. A monthly check from his mother and a job 
at a fast-food restaurant helped make ends meet.
Ms. Harrell anticipated the inevitable question.
“ ‘Why are your children at home, and you’re in Texas?’ ” 
she asked. “Well, I’m trying to get home. It’s just crazy. 
But my kids know my situation. When school started, 
I had to work a couple of more weeks, because I had that 
light bill.
“It’s like, ‘Oh my God, is everything O.K.?’ I couldn’t even 
sleep at night. O.K. Lord, if anything happens, I’m going 
to be seen as such a bad mama, and I’m a hundred miles 
from home.”
Last week, she left her job in Houston and returned 
to New Orleans — for good.
If the causes are complicated, the consequences seem 
evident to school officials: a large cadre of belligerent students, 
hostile to authority and with no worry about parental 
punishment at home.
Since McDonogh reopened nearly two months ago with 
enrollees from 5 of the city’s 15 high schools, the students 
have committed six “very serious” assaults, Mr. Jackson said.
A young man suddenly bent over in the milling crowd 
waiting for a bus after school. The police were handcuffing 
him, for smoking marijuana, a school official said.
In the halls, students jostle one another and laugh on the 
way to class. In some classes, students strain attentively 
toward the blackboard.
But there is tension. The storm overturned their world, 
teachers and administrators say, destroying houses and 
scattering families.
“They’re rebelling against authority,” Ms. Daliet, the 
science teacher, said. “You ask them to do something, 
they have an attitude.”
In the lunchroom and in the corridors, students are 
ordered to tuck in their shirts. Many just grin in response.
“When you have guidelines at home that reflect guidelines 
at the school, it’s a seamless transition,” Mr. Jackson said. 
“But when it’s not there, you deal with a student who’s 
genuinely, ‘I don’t care, I’m going to do what I want to do.’ ”
Fights break out daily. About 50 students have been 
suspended; 20 have been recommended for expulsion.
Of the 128 schools in the city, fewer half have reopened. 
The state took over many of them after the storm. That change, 
hailed at first as a bright beginning, has proven to be partly stillborn, 
as teachers, textbooks and supplies came up drastically 
short in the state-run schools.
The McDonogh library has no books. State officials, fearing 
mold, threw out all of them.
Rundown before the storm, the school buildings are now 
even more battered. The stalls in a girls’ restroom have no 
doors.
Recrimination and finger pointing have been ample, 
and state officials are on the defensive.
“The same way other residents are calling it quits, teachers 
are no different,” Leslie Jacobs, a member of the state school 
board, said. “The teacher shortage is real. The book shortage 
is real. We have a labor shortage. There is a shortage of bus 
drivers. The whole food-service industry is short of workers.”
Mr. Jackson is a smiling, purposeful presence, friendly but 
firm, upbraiding youths for slovenly dress and pursuing others 
along for slacking in the halls. At every turn, it can seem, 
an omnipresent security guard or police officer speaks to teenagers, 
searching for weapons or admonishing for back talk.
As a group milled on the street corner of the three-story 
1911 brick building, a guard called out from the steps: 
“He’s taken his shirt off! They’re getting ready to fight!”
Three burly police officers quickly went up Esplanade Avenue 
to break up the clash.
Mr. Jackson conceded that the scale of the unrest had taken 
him aback.
“I knew it would happen,” he said. “I had some forewarning. 
But I didn’t know it would be of this magnitude. We’ve seen 
things that really shouldn’t occur in a school.”
Several weeks ago, a teacher was “beaten unmercifully” by 
a ninth grader enraged at being barred from class because 
he was late, Mr. Jackson said. The teacher, hospitalized, 
has not returned to work. The student was arrested.
An 18-year-old knocked a guard unconscious. 
The police charged him.
The reputation for violence, first acquired through a shooting 
in the gymnasium in 2003 in which a young man with 
a rifle killed a student in front of 200 others, has grown.
Three weeks ago, a group of students summoned reporters 
to the school to complain about the many officers.
“We have a lot of security guards, and not enough teachers,” 
Maya Dawson, 17, said.
Jerinise Walker, 15, added: “It’s like you’re in jail. You have 
people watching you all the time.”
Mr. Jackson said the time had not come to reduce security.
“When we get our students to respond in a different way,” 
he said, “then I can back off. We’re trying to train our students 
to resolve conflict, and that’s something they haven’t been able to do.”
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10) An Activist, Then a Journalist, and Now a Victim 
of the Violence He Covered
By COLIN MOYNIHAN
November 1, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/01/nyregion/01activist.html
When Bradley Will traveled to a state in southern Mexico last month, 
his goal was to document and describe the turbulence in the region, 
where striking teachers and their allies demanding the resignation 
of the state’s governor have clashed at times with armed attackers.
The conflict had received scant attention in much of the news media, 
but it was exactly the kind of situation that Mr. Will relished witnessing 
and writing about. He often traveled from New York City to Latin 
America to chronicle little-known disputes, and his articles made 
him a familiar figure in the world of the alternative media.
On Friday, Mr. Will, 36, was fatally shot in the chest while 
videotaping near a barricaded road at the edge of the city of Oaxaca, 
the capital of the state with the same name, during a confrontation 
between demonstrators equipped with Molotov cocktails and fireworks 
and a group of men armed with pistols and rifles. Witnesses 
have said that Mr. Will was hit by bullets fired toward the 
demonstrators.
Five people have been detained in connection with the shooting, 
including two local officials and two police officers. State officials 
are running the investigation, and a spokesman for President 
Vicente Fox said that the federal government could take over 
the inquiry if state authorities did not do an adequate job. 
Human rights groups and a New York-based organization that 
advocates on behalf of journalists have called for the federal 
government to take over the investigation immediately.
“The story of the situation in Oaxaca was not getting out,” said 
Beka Economopoulos, a friend who lives in New York and works 
for an environmental group. “Brad died trying to get the story 
of what was happening in Oaxaca out to the world.”
Although Mr. Will grew up in Illinois and lived for years on the 
Lower East Side, he traveled from coast to coast to attend protests 
on a variety of issues, sometimes getting to far-flung spots 
by riding the rails in empty box cars.
Mr. Will’s writings appeared in newspapers and on Web sites run 
by the Independent Media Center, a collective of left-leaning 
volunteers organized in chapters around the world, who commonly 
act as both participants in events and chroniclers of them. Its 
reporters and photographers typically include personal observations 
as they document issues that they have strong feelings about, 
like the war in Iraq or the impact of global trade on the 
developing world.
Mr. Will had a long history of advocating for environmental 
causes and attending political demonstrations in the United 
States. In his travels to Latin America, Mr. Will, at times, found 
himself in perilous settings. In a 2005 article about squatters 
in Brazil, he described being shot at by the authorities and 
detained. Friends said that Mr. Will was haunted by violence 
he witnessed there.
“He was really affected by that,” said Seth Tobocman, an artist 
in New York who discussed the experience with Mr. Will. 
“He started out as an activist and became a journalist 
so he could tell people about what he saw.”
In his last written dispatch, which was posted on Oct. 16 on 
a Web site maintained by the New York City chapter of the 
Independent Media Center, Mr. Will described the killing 
of a man in Oaxaca and said that some people in Oaxaca 
blamed the death on paramilitary vigilantes.
The images filmed by Mr. Will minutes before his death, 
which are on the Independent Media Center’s Web site, show 
a chaotic scene, in which men used slingshots to shoot 
projectiles and gunshots can be heard. At one point, Mr. Will 
appears to videotape from beneath a truck, aiming his lens 
at a man firing a pistol. Minutes later, during the final images 
of the video, a cry is heard and the camera appears to fall 
to the ground.
Mr. Will’s funeral was held Saturday in Oaxaca. A priest 
splashed holy water onto his coffin and a woman bent down 
to kiss its side. Mr. Will’s mother and father, along with two 
sisters and a brother, issued a statement mourning Mr. Will’s 
death.
“We are grieving over the tragic and senseless loss of Brad’s life,” 
it read in part. “We believe he died doing what he loved.”
Elisabeth Malkin in Mexico City and Carolyn Wilder in New York 
contributed reporting.
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11) Gambling Against the Dollar
By DAVID LEONHARDT
November 1, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/01/business/01leonhardt.html?ref=business
A couple of years ago, Robert E. Rubin — éminence grise at Citigroup 
and the Democratic Party’s economic wise man — decided that the 
United States dollar was headed for a fall.
This view put Mr. Rubin in good company. Nearly everyone who spends 
time thinking about the American economy believes that the value 
of the dollar has to fall at some point.
The United States has been borrowing enormous sums of money 
from other countries, largely so that American consumers can turn 
around and buy the computers, clothing and other goods those 
countries make. Like all borrowing booms, this one will eventually 
subside. When it does — and foreign investors stop buying so many 
dollars to lend back to us — the dollar will drop.
With this chain of events in mind, a former colleague of Mr. Rubin’s 
at Goldman Sachs had been whispering in his ear that anybody who 
didn’t have 20 or 30 percent of his holdings tied to other currencies 
was “out of his mind.”
Yet as Mr. Rubin told me last week, his finances at the time were
“totally dollar-based.” (As are yours, in all likelihood.)
So he decided to bet against the dollar by buying options on other
 currencies. It turned out to be a very bad bet.
This is a column about why Mr. Rubin’s logic made perfect sense — 
why it still does, in fact — yet why most people who have made 
similar bets in recent years have taken a bath. Warren E. Buffett 
cost Berkshire Hathaway almost $1 billion last year shorting the 
dollar. On the opposite end of the investing spectrum, I put 
a small amount of my retirement savings last year into a T. Rowe 
Price mutual fund that is linked more directly to foreign currencies 
than most foreign-stock funds are. It has delivered a return 
of negative 7 percent.
The fate of the dollar, to be blunt, often seems like one of the 
most boring economic subjects around. It doesn’t offer obvious 
“Freakonomics”-type lessons about the foibles of everyday life. 
Instead, it has inspired a stack of policy papers filled with terms 
like current-account deficit and trade-weighted exchange rate.
But it really is worth trying to understand what’s going on. In 
the end, the value of the dollar will go a long way toward 
determining how well Americans live: which food we can 
afford to eat, which cars we can buy, which foreign policy 
we can pursue. As Mr. Rubin says: “It is vitally important. 
It has the potential to affect all of us.”
The simplest way to explain the problem is to say that the 
United States has been living beyond its means.
Both the federal government and American families have 
been spending more money than they take in, leaving both 
in debt. To close the gap between our resources and our 
spending habits, we have borrowed from abroad. It’s the 
only option.
The net amount of money leaving the United States — 
that is, the amount of money we need to borrow back 
to support our lifestyle — has soared to $800 billion 
a year. “It’s just stunning,” said Kenneth S. Rogoff, former 
chief economist of the International Monetary Fund. 
“It’s unprecedented.”
The big question now is how will the situation reverse 
itself. It could happen gradually, with other countries 
slowly reducing their purchase of dollars. This wouldn’t 
be horrible, as Americans discovered when the dollar 
dropped in the 1980s. But most of us would be worse 
off for the simple reason that foreign loans would 
no longer be letting us live beyond our means.
The other possibility is that an unexpected event — 
a spike in oil prices, say — could cause foreign investors 
to cut their dollar purchases sharply, bringing all sorts 
of economic havoc. Edwin M. Truman, an economist who 
spent a quarter-century at the Federal Reserve, compares 
the situation to a merry-go-round that is moving too 
fast for its underlying mechanics. It gradually loses 
speed, leaving its riders disappointed but unscathed, 
or it stops suddenly and throws some of them 
off their horses.
Paul A. Volcker, the Fed chairman who whipped inflation 
in the ’80s, has become sufficiently worried to call the 
circumstances as “dangerous and intractable” as any he 
can remember. Yet, he laments, no one in Washington 
is taking steps to minimize the risks.
Whatever the outcome, a decline in the dollar will probably 
be part of it. That’s why Mr. Rubin made his bet. But the 
dollar didn’t cooperate. While no longer at the highs 
it reached in 2002, it has stayed strong. Mr. Rubin ended 
up losing more than $1 million (which, certainly, he can 
afford) before getting out of the currency market.
Throughout his career — as an arbitrage trader at Goldman, 
as the Treasury secretary who led the 1995 bailout of Mexico — 
he has argued that decisions should not be judged solely 
on the outcome. Somebody could do a perfectly good job 
of weighing the relevant risks, make a call that maximizes 
the chances of success and still not succeed, because the 
world is a messy, unpredictable place.
This point has usually been somewhat academic, however, 
because his results have generally been good. At Goldman, 
he rose to become co-chairman thanks partly to his trading 
record. In the Clinton administration, he won more than his 
share of policy arguments and helped guide the economy 
to its best performance of the last 30 years.
But when he talks about the dollar, you can see how hard it is, 
even for somebody with his self-assurance, to remain confident 
in the face of a failed prediction. “I think I was right, probabilistically,” 
he said recently, sitting in his Citigroup office overlooking Park 
Avenue. “But I don’t know. I really don’t. I don’t think anyone 
does. It’s also possible that none of this could happen. 
It’s possible that for reasons none of us can see that this 
will work itself out in a very copacetic way.”
Mr. Rubin and the other dollar bears look a little like the skeptics 
of the real estate boom back in 2005. For years, those skeptics 
warned that things had gotten out of hand and that reality would 
soon reassert itself. And for years, they were wrong. The longer 
they were wrong, the more out of touch they sound.
How is that housing boom going, anyway?
Email: leonhardt@nytimes.com
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12) U.S. Military Adopts Desperate Tactics
Inter Press Service
Dahr Jamail and Ali al-Fadhily
http://dahrjamailiraq.com 
*FALLUJAH, Oct 31 (IPS) - Increased violence is being countered by harsh
new measures across the Sunni-dominated al-Anabar province west of
Baghdad, residents say.*
"Thousands have been killed here by the Multi-National Forces (MNF) and
Iraqi allies, and the situation is getting worse every day," a member of
the Fallujah city council speaking on condition of anonymity told IPS.
"We have no role to play because the Americans always prefer violent
solutions that have led from one disaster to another."
The violence appears to be affecting the civilian population far more
than it is stifling the resistance. The suffering of people in Fallujah
increases by the day, and the number of resistance snipers appears to be
increasing in response to the U.S. use of snipers against civilians.
"In fact it is many more snipers now, considering the number of
incidents that have taken place," Sebri Ahmed from the local police told
IPS. "Our men are terrified, and the majority of them have quit after
serious threats of getting killed, like our three main leaders."
General Hudhairi Abbas, former deputy police chief of Fallujah was
killed two months ago. Colonel Ahmed Dirii was killed soon after, and
last week the police leader of al-Anbar, General Shaaban al-Janabi, was
assassinated in front of his family house in Fallujah.
There are now no police patrols on the streets of Fallujah, and the only
policemen around remain inside their main station.
"How come those three Fallujan born officers were killed while the
Fallujah police leader General Salah Aati was hiding behind concrete
barriers," a police officer said. Aati lives in the green zone of
Baghdad, a highly barricaded government area.
Meanwhile, attacks against occupation forces have increased in frequency
and severity. On Eid recently, four U.S. Humvees in a convoy were
destroyed by roadside bombs.
The military responded by closing all the checkpoints in the city.
Thousands had to spend the night, the first of the holidays, outside of
the city. The main roads inside the city were also closed.
"Four firemen were killed by the U.S. army because they were late to get
to the four burning hummers," a young man who witnessed the attack told
IPS. "They were not killed by mistake, they were killed in front of many
people."
The U.S. military has admitted that it killed three firemen by mistake
because they were suspected to be militants.
Hundreds of residents later attended the burial of the firemen together
with five other men killed by occupation forces the same day.
"The Americans brought five dead civilians whom they shot in the city
streets in revenge for their casualties," a man at the former football
field now called Martyrs Graveyard told IPS. "We are going to need
another graveyard, this one is going to be full soon." All semblance of
normal living in the province is disappearing. Saif al-Juboori, a
student at the University of al-Anbar in Ramadi says this will be a
wasted year for thousands of students.
"The whole university is now under siege, and there is a checkpoint at
the main gate," Juboori told IPS. "The students or teachers who approach
must lift their shirts from 50 metres away and listen to nasty comments
of arrogant soldiers who give body checks before admitting people in.
Most will no longer accept such humiliation, and so there will be no
college this year."
Ramadi has been facing electricity and water cuts for about two weeks
now. Most residents believe this is punishment for the popular support
for Iraqi resistance.
"We would rather starve to death than accept this occupation and its
Iranian allies," a 20-year-old student told IPS. "We will not let the
blood of our brother martyrs go unpunished."
Despite the punishing tactics of the occupation forces, people appear
unwilling to cooperate with local officials or the U.S. military against
local fighters.
"Iraqis believe firmly that U.S. ambassador (Zalmay) Khalilzad is the
actual ruler of the occupied country despite the repeated comedy of
transfers of sovereignty to Iyad Allawi, Ibrahim al-Jaafari and now
Noori al-Maliki's governments," a senior leader of the Arab National
Movement in Iraq, speaking on condition of anonymity, told IPS.
"Yet, that does not mean that the U.S. embassy has real control, as long
as there are resistance fighters who are firmly holding the Iraqi
streets in Sunni areas, and militias with their death squads controlling
the rest of the country as well as the huge oil market." Resistance
fighters recently came out to show their strength in Ramadi, the capital
city of al-Anbar province. Dozens of cars loaded with armed men went
around the city.
Immediately after that, power and water supply were cut, and raids
carried out in civilian areas. Several were killed by U.S. snipers,
residents said.
The police did nothing, they have a hard time protecting themselves.
Gunmen have attacked Iraqi police stations in Samarra, Beji and Mosul.
"We are back to point zero," a senior officer in the Ministry of
Interior told IPS. "Our forces are either loyal to militias and
political parties or too powerless to do their duties."
"Every one who fights the American occupation has our full support,"
Yassin Hussein, a 30-year-old teacher in Ramadi told IPS. "They lied to
us all the time, and it is time for them to admit their terrible failure
and leave. Let them go rebuild New Orleans."
Hussein said resistance fighters are the only force able to keep local
peace and keep criminal gangs in check. "The Americans are too busy
trying to take care of their own security to care about Iraqis."
(c)2006 Dahr Jamail.
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13) Substance in Red Wine Could Extend Life, Study Says
By NICHOLAS WADE
November 1, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/01/science/02winecnd.html?hp&ex=1162443600&en=e2387cca218a223b&ei=5094&partner=homepage
Can you have your cake and eat it? Is there a free lunch after all, 
red wine included? Researchers at the Harvard Medical School 
and the National Institute of Aging report that a natural substance 
found in red wine, known as resveratrol, offsets the bad effects 
of a high-calorie diet in mice and significantly extends their lifespan.
Their report, published electronically today in Nature, implies 
that very large daily doses of resveratrol could offset the unhealthy, 
high-calorie diet thought to underlie the rising toll of obesity in the 
United States and elsewhere, should people respond to the drug 
as mice do.
Resveratrol is found in the skin of grapes and in red wine and 
is conjectured to be a partial explanation for the French paradox, 
the puzzling fact that people in France to enjoy a high-fat diet 
yet suffer less heart disease than Americans.
The researchers fed one group of mice a diet in which 60 percent 
of calories came from fat. The diet started when the mice, all males, 
were 1 year old, which is middle-aged in mouse terms. As expected, 
the mice soon developed signs of impending diabetes, with grossly 
enlarged livers, and started to die much sooner than mice fed 
a standard diet.
Another group of mice was fed the identical high-fat diet but with 
a large daily dose of resveratrol. The resveratrol did not stop them 
from putting on weight and growing as tubby as the other fat-eating 
mice. But it averted the high levels of glucose and insulin in the 
bloodstream, which are warning signs of diabetes, and it kept the 
mice's livers at normal size.
Even more strikingly, the substance sharply extended the mice's 
lifetimes. Those fed resveratrol along with the high-fat diet died 
many months later than the mice on high fat alone, and at the 
same rate as mice on a standard healthy diet. They had all the 
pleasures of gluttony but paid none of the price.
The researchers, led by David Sinclair and Joseph Baur at the 
Harvard Medical School and by Rafael de Cabo at the National 
Institute of Aging, also tried to estimate the effect of resveratrol 
on the mice's physical quality of life. They gauged how well the 
mice could walk along a rotating rod before falling off, a test 
of their motor skills. The mice on resveratrol did better as they 
grew older, ending up with much the same staying power on 
the rod as mice fed a normal diet.
The researchers hope their findings will have relevance to people 
too. Their study shows, they conclude, that orally taken drugs 
"at doses achievable in humans can safely reduce many of the 
negative consequences of excess caloric intake, with an overall 
improvement in health and survival."
Several experts said that people wondering if they should take 
resveratrol should wait until more results were in, particularly 
safety tests in humans. "It's a pretty exciting area but these are 
early days," said Dr. Ronald Kahn, president of the Joslin Diabetes 
Center in Boston. Information about resveratrol's effects on human 
metabolism should be available a year or so, he said, adding, 
"Have another glass of pinot noir — that's as far as I'd take 
it right now."
The mice were fed a hefty dose of resveratrol, 24 milligrams 
per kilogram of body weight. Red wine has about 1.5 to 3 mg 
of resveratrol per liter, so a person would need to drink from 
10 to 20 bottles of red wine a day to get such a dose. Whatever 
good the resveratrol might do would be negated by the sheer 
amount of alcohol.
Dr. Richard Hodes, director of the National Institute of Aging, 
which helped support the study, also said that people should 
wait for the results of safety testing. Substances that are safe 
and beneficial in small doses, like vitamins, sometimes prove 
to be harmful when taken in high doses, he said.
One person who is not following this prudent advice, however, 
is Dr. Sinclair, the chief author of the study. He has long been 
taking resveratrol, though at a dose of only 5 milligrams per 
kilogram. Mice given that amount in a second feeding trial have 
shown similar, but less dramatic, results as those on the 
24 milligram a day dose, he said.
Dr. Sinclair has had a physician check his metabolism, because 
many resveratrol preparations contain possibly hazardous 
impurities, but so far no ill effects have come to light. His wife, 
his parents, and "half my lab" are also taking resveratrol, he said.
Dr. Sinclair declined to name his source of resveratrol. Many 
companies sell the substance, along with claims that rivals' 
preparations are inactive. One such company, Longevinex, 
sells an extract of red wine and knotweed that contains 
an unspecified amount of resveratrol. But each capsule 
is equivalent to "5 to 15 5-ounce glasses of the best red 
wine," the company's Web page asserts.
Dr. Sinclair is the founder of a company, Sirtris Pharmaceuticals, 
that has developed several chemicals designed to mimic the role 
of resveratrol but at much lower doses. Sirtris has begun clinical 
trials of one of these compounds, an improved version 
of resveratrol, with the aim of seeing if it helps control glucose 
levels in people with diabetes. "We believe you cannot reach 
therapeutic levels in man with ordinary resveratrol," said 
Dr. Christoph Westphal, the company's chief executive.
Behind the resveratrol test is a considerable degree of scientific 
theory, some of it well established and some yet to be proved. 
Dr. Sinclair's initial interest in resveratrol had nothing to do with 
red wine. It derived from work by Leonard Guarente of the 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who in 1955 found 
a gene that controlled the longevity of yeast, a single-celled 
fungus. Dr. Guarente and Dr. Sinclair, who had come from Australia 
to work as a post-doctoral student in Dr. Guarente's lab, discovered 
the mechanism by which the gene makes yeast cells live longer. 
The gene is known as sir-2 in yeast, sir standing for silent 
information regulator, and its equivalent in mice is called SIRT-1.
Dr. Guarente then found that the gene's protein needs a common 
metabolite to activate it and he developed the theory that the gene, 
by sensing the level of metabolic activity, mediates a phenomenon 
of great interest to researchers in aging, the greater life span 
caused by caloric restriction.
Researchers have known since 1935 that mice fed a calorically 
restricted diet — one with all necessary vitamins and nutrients 
but 40 percent fewer calories — live up to 50 percent longer 
than mice on ordinary diets.
This low-calorie-provoked increase in longevity occurs in many 
organisms and seems to be an ancient survival strategy. When 
food is plentiful, live in the fast lane and breed prolifically. When 
famine strikes, switch resources to body maintenance and live 
longer so as to ride out the famine.
Researchers had long supposed that the increase in longevity 
was a passive phenomenon: during famine or on a low-calorie 
diet, organisms would have lower metabolism and produce less 
of the violent chemicals that oxidize tissues. But Dr. Guarente 
and Dr. Sinclair believed that longer life was attained by an active 
program that triggered specific protective steps against the diseases 
common in old age. It was because these diseases were averted 
in calorie restriction, they believed, that animals lived longer.
Most people find it impossible to keep to a diet with 40 percent 
fewer calories than usual. So if caloric restriction really does make 
people as well as mice live longer — which is plausible but not yet 
proved — it would be desirable to have some drug that activated 
the SIRT-1 gene's protein, tricking it into thinking that days 
of famine lay ahead.
In 2003 Dr. Sinclair, by then in his own lab, devised a way to test 
a large number of chemicals for their ability to mimic caloric 
restriction in people by activating SIRT-1. The champion was 
resveratrol, already well known for its possible health benefits.
The experiment reported today tests one aspect of caloric 
restriction, the reduction in metabolic disease. Calorically restricted 
mice also suffer less cancer and heart disease, and there is some 
evidence that neurodegenerative diseases are also held at bay.
Critics point out that resveratrol is a powerful chemical that acts 
in many different ways in cells. The new experiment, they say, 
does not prove that resveratrol negated the effects of a high-
calorie diet by activating SIRT-1. Indeed, they are not convinced 
that resveratrol activates SIRT-1 at all. "It hasn't really been 
clearly shown, the way a biochemist would want to see it, that 
resveratrol can activate sirtuin," said Matt Kaeberlein, a former 
student of Dr. Guarente who now does research at the University 
of Washington in Seattle. Sirtuin is the protein produced 
by the SIRT-1 gene.
Dr. Sinclair said experiments at Sirtris have essentially wrapped 
up this point. But they have not yet been published, so under 
the rules of scientific debate he cannot use them to support 
his position. In his Nature article he therefore has to concede, 
"Whether resveratrol acts directly or indirectly through Sir2 
in vivo is currently a subject of debate."
Given that caloric restriction forces a tradeoff between fertility 
and lifespan, resveratrol might be expected to reduce fertility 
in mice. For reasons not yet clear, Dr. Sinclair said he saw no 
such effect in his experiment.
If resveratrol does act by prodding the sirtuins into action, then 
there will be much interest in the new class of sirtuin activators 
now being tested by Sirtris. Dr. Westphal, the company's chief 
executive, has no practical interest in the longevity-promoting 
effects of sirtuins and caloric restriction. For the Food and Drug 
Administration, if for no one else, aging is not a disease and 
death is not an end-point. The F.D.A. will only approve drugs 
that treat diseases in measurable ways, so Dr. Westphal hopes 
to show his sirtuin activators will improve the indicators of specific 
diseases, starting with diabetes.
"We think that if we can harness the benefits of caloric restriction, 
we wouldn't simply have ways of making people live longer, but 
an entirely new therapeutic strategy to address the diseases 
of aging," Dr. Guarente said.
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
14) Israel Opens Fire During Mosque Standoff
By GREG MYRE
November 3, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/03/world/middleeast/04mideastcnd.html?hp&ex=1162616400&en=59140c6081ad22a0&ei=5094&partner=homepage
JERUSALEM, Nov. 3 — Israeli troops fired at a large crowd of unarmed 
Palestinian women in the Gaza Strip today as the women approached 
a mosque to help Palestinian militants holed up inside. Two women 
were killed and about 10 were injured, according to hospital workers.
The shooting provoked widespread outrage among Palestinians.
The Israeli military said its fire was directed at Palestinian gunmen 
who were hiding among the women as they marched toward 
the Um al-Nasir mosque in Beit Hanun, the town in the 
northeastern Gaza Strip where Israeli troops and militants 
have been battling for the past three days. The Israelis said 
eight militants were shot, and that they were not aware that
women were hit, but were investigating.
Ismail Haniya, the Palestinian prime minister, angrily called 
on the international community to “come here and witness 
the daily massacres that are being carried out against the 
Palestinian nation.”
Mr. Haniya also praised the women “who led the protest 
to break the siege of Beit Hanun.”
The shooting, which was captured by television cameras, 
was the most dramatic episode so far in the fighting in Beit 
Hanun. Israeli forces entered the town early on Wednesday 
in an attempt to stop Palestinian militants from firing rockets 
from the area into Israel.
As Israeli forces pursued the militants in the town on Thursday, 
an estimated 60 gunmen dashed inside the Um al-Nasir mosque, 
initiating a standoff that lasted through the night.
Israeli troops in armored vehicles surrounded the mosque. 
For several hours, soldiers used loudspeakers to call on the 
militants to surrender, and several did, according to the military. 
The Israelis also fired tear gas and stun grenades into the 
mosque in an attempt to force the gunmen out.
Around 3 a.m. today, the gunmen in the mosque began firing 
on the Israeli soldiers, who shot back, and heavy exchanges 
ensued, the military said.
The Israeli army called in an armored bulldozer and used 
it to knock down one wall of the mosque compound, the 
military and Palestinian witnesses said.
Early this morning, a Palestinian radio station called on women 
in the town to march to the mosque and support the gunmen 
inside. A short time later, hundreds of women, dressed 
in flowing black abayas and wearing head scarves, headed 
to the the scene.
As they approached the mosque, shots rang out, but the 
women continued marching. A moment later, a number 
of women were hit, and the crowd scattered. Some of the 
wailing women turning back, while others kept advancing 
toward the mosque, climbing over improvised dirt barriers 
set up by the Israeli forces.
“We heard the call for women to help the fighters, and we 
decided to go,” said Mona Abu Jasir, 37, who was hit by 
a bullet in the right leg. “We had no weapons, and we were 
walking toward the mosque when I was shot.”
Television footage showed at least one man in the crowd, 
though there was no indication that he had a weapon. 
The man was shot and fell to the ground, and was surrounded 
by women until rescue workers arrived.
One marcher, Suhad el-Masri, 28, said she and several of her 
relatives were carrying abayas — long flowing gowns — 
and scarves to give to the men.
“We took them so they could disguise themselves as women
 and escape,” said Ms. Masri. Her sister, Hiba Rajab, 20, 
sustained serious injuries when she was shot in both 
legs and her left arm.
In the ensuing chaos, some women reached the mosque, 
and the gunmen managed to slip away, the Israeli military 
and Palestinian witnesses said. It was not clear whether the 
gunmen dressed as women to facilitate their escape. Shortly 
after the standoff ended, the roof of the mosque collapsed, 
apparently from the cumulative damage sustained in the 
fighting.
Palestinian hospitals identified the two women who were 
killed as Amna Abu Oudah, 42, and Intissar Ali, 40.
Later in the day, about 1,000 women marched outside 
Egypt’s diplomatic mission in Gaza City, denouncing the 
Israeli actions and calling on Egypt to intervene.
Also in Beit Hanun, two young Palestinian males, ages 15 
and 18, were killed by Israeli fire, Palestinian medical workers 
said. Over the past three days, more than 20 Palestinians have 
been killed, including militants and civilians, as well as one 
Israeli soldier.
So far, the Israeli incursion has not reduced the Palestinian 
rocket fire, which has continued for the past three days. Militants 
fired several more rockets from northern Gaza into southern Israel 
today, but there was no damage or injuries, the Israeli military said. 
Meanwhile, in the West Bank, Israeli soldiers arrested the Palestinian 
minister for housing and public works, Abdel Rahman Zaidan, who 
belongs to Hamas, the radical Islamic group that leads the Palestinian 
Authority. Israel has arrested more than two dozen Palestinian 
legislators and cabinet ministers from Hamas in the West Bank 
over the past four months.
The crackdown began after Palestinian militants, including those 
from Hamas, staged a cross-border raid and captured an Israeli 
soldier, and then took him into Gaza. That event also prompted 
the Israeli military to return to Gaza, which the army had left 
in September 2005.
Taghreed El-Khodary contributed reporting from Gaza.
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
15) Medicaid Wants Citizenship Proof for Infant Care
By ROBERT PEAR
November 3, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/03/washington/03medicaid.html?hp&ex=1162616400&en=4917802b9471b620&ei=5094&partner=homepage
WASHINGTON, Nov. 2 — Under a new federal policy, children born 
in the United States to illegal immigrants with low incomes will 
no longer be automatically entitled to health insurance through 
Medicaid, Bush administration officials said Thursday.
Doctors and hospitals said the policy change would make it more 
difficult for such infants, who are United States citizens, to obtain 
health care needed in the first year of life.
Illegal immigrants are generally barred from Medicaid but can get 
coverage for treatment of emergency medical conditions, including 
labor and delivery.
In the past, once a woman received emergency care under Medicaid 
for the birth of a baby, the child was deemed eligible for coverage 
as well, and states had to cover the children for one year from 
the date of birth.
Under the new policy, an application must be filed for the child, 
and the parents must provide documents to prove the child’s 
citizenship.
The documentation requirements took effect in July, but some 
states have been slow to enforce them, and many doctors 
are only now becoming aware of the effects on newborns.
Obtaining a birth certificate can take weeks in some states, 
doctors said. Moreover, they said, illegal immigrant parents 
may be reluctant to go to a state welfare office to file applications 
because they fear contact with government agencies that could 
report their presence to immigration authorities.
Administration officials said the change was necessary under 
their reading of a new law, the Deficit Reduction Act, signed 
by President Bush in February. The law did not mention newborns, 
but generally tightened documentation requirements because 
some lawmakers were concerned that immigrants were fraudulently 
claiming United States citizenship to get Medicaid.
Marilyn E. Wilson, a spokeswoman for the Tennessee Medicaid 
program, said: “The federal government told us we have no latitude. 
All states must change their policies and practices. We will not 
be able to cover any services for the newborn until a Medicaid 
application is filed. That could be days, weeks or months after 
the child is born.”
About four million babies are born in the United States each year, 
and Medicaid pays for more than one-third of all births. The number 
involving illegal immigrant parents is unknown but is likely to be 
in the tens of thousands, health experts said.
Doctors and hospitals denounced the policy change and denied 
that it was required by the new law. Dr. Jay E. Berkelhamer, president 
of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said the policy “punishes 
babies who, according to the Constitution, are citizens because 
they were born here.”
Dr. Martin C. Michaels, a pediatrician in Dalton, Ga., said that 
continuous coverage in the first year of life was important because 
“newborns need care right from the start.”
“Some Americans may want to grant amnesty to undocumented 
immigrants, and others may want to send them home,” Dr. Michaels 
said. “But the children who are born here had no say in that debate.”
Under a 1984 law, infants born to pregnant women on Medicaid 
are in most cases deemed eligible for Medicaid for one year.
In an interview on Thursday, Leslie V. Norwalk, acting administrator 
of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said the new policy 
“reflects what the new law says in terms of eligibility.”
“When emergency Medicaid pays for a birth,” Ms. Norwalk said, 
“the child is not automatically deemed eligible. But the child could 
apply and could qualify for Medicaid because of the family’s poverty 
status. If anyone knows about a child being denied care, we want 
to know about it. Please step up and tell us.”
Under federal law, hospitals generally have to examine and treat 
patients who need emergency care, regardless of their ability to pay. 
So the new policy is most likely to affect access to other types 
of care, including preventive services and treatment for infections 
and chronic conditions, doctors said.
Representative Charlie Norwood, Republican of Georgia, 
was a principal architect of the new law.
“Charlie’s intent was that every person receiving Medicaid 
needs to provide documentation,” said John E. Stone, 
a spokesman for Mr. Norwood, who is a dentist and has been 
active on health care issues. “With newborns, there should 
be no problem. All you have to do is provide a birth certificate 
or hospital records verifying birth.”
But Dr. Berkelhamer disagreed. Even when the children are 
eligible for Medicaid, he said, illegal immigrants may be afraid 
to apply because of “the threat of deportation.”
The new policy “will cost the health care system more in the 
long run,” Dr. Berkelhamer added, because children of illegal 
immigrants may go without immunizations, preventive care 
and treatments needed in the first year of life.
Doctors, children’s hospitals and advocacy groups have been 
urging states to preserve the old policy on Medicaid eligibility 
for children born to illegal immigrants.
Sara Rosenbaum, a professor of health law at George Washington 
University, said: “The new policy reflects a tortured reading 
of the new law and is contrary to the language of the 1984 statute, 
which Congress did not change. The whole purpose of the earlier 
law, passed with bipartisan support, was to make sure that a baby 
would not have a single day’s break in coverage from the date 
of birth through the first year of life.”
California has objected to the new policy. S. Kimberly Belshé, 
secretary of the California Health and Human Services Agency, 
said: “By virtue of being born in the United States, a child is a U.S. 
citizen. What more proof does the federal government need?”
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
16) Why Western workers are set to become poorer
31.10.2006
by Stephen Roach
http://www.moneyweek.com/file/20809/why-western-workers-are-set-to-become-poorer.html
What do the world's three largest economies have in common?   
The answer underscores one of the key tensions of globalisation – 
unrelenting pressure on labour income.   The corollary of that 
phenomenon is equally revealing – ever–rising returns to the owners 
of capital. For a global economy in the midst of its strongest four–year 
boom since the early 1970s, this tug-of-war between labour and 
capital is an increasingly serious source of disequilibrium.   
It has important economic, social, and political implications – 
all of which could complicate the coming global rebalancing.
My recent trip to Japan was the clincher.   As I found in Germany 
during a series of extensive visits last month, and as has been 
evident in the United States throughout the current upturn, Japanese 
labour income remains under extraordinary downward pressure. 
There is no way this is a coincidence. In all three economies, 
unemployment has been declining in recent years – a 27% drop 
in the US jobless rate since mid-2003, a 21% decline in Japan 
since early 2003, and a 15% fall in the German unemployment 
rate since mid-2004. 
Yet in none of the three economies has a cyclical tightening in 
labour markets resulted in a meaningful increase in real wages 
and/or the labour share of national income. By our calculations, 
fully 57 months into the current cyclical upturn, US private sector 
compensation is still tracking nearly $400 billion (in real terms)
below the average trajectory of the past four business cycles. 
After a glimmer of revival in early 2005, stagnation is once 
again evident in Japanese real wages. Nor are there any signs 
of a meaningful upturn in German real wages; to the contrary, 
inflation-adjusted compensation per worker in the overall 
business sector has actually declined in four of the past 
five years.
The case of Europe merits special comment. We harbor the 
illusion that European workers are different – that sheltered 
by a deeply entrenched social contract, they enjoy great 
success in getting more than their fair share of the pie.   
That impression is no longer accurate. As Elga Bartsch 
points out in a fascinating new piece of research, after 
having spiked up dramatically in the aftermath of German 
reunification, pan-European real compensation per employee 
has been basically unchanged since 2001.
Nor does she see this changing as an increasingly tight 
European labour market now approaches its "speed limit." 
The structural forces are simply far too powerful – namely, 
globalisation, a shift to part-time and temporary employment, 
and the diminished power of European labour unions. The 
coming wage round in Germany will undoubtedly test this view, 
but Elga does not look for a major breakout. Far from marching 
to its own beat, the European worker is in the same shape 
as those elsewhere in the industrial world – suffering from 
the unrelenting pressures of relatively stagnant real wages.
At work are the increasingly powerful forces of globalisation – 
namely, the combination of intensified cross-border competition 
and a wrenching global labour arbitrage that has given rise to an 
extraordinary productivity push in the high-wage industrial world. 
The good news is that the productivity payback is at hand. 
The United States has recorded a decade of 2.8% productivity 
growth – doubling the sluggish 1.4% gains recorded from 1974 
to 1995. Japanese productivity growth has averaged 2.1% over 
the past three years – nearly double the 1.2% trend from 1995 
to 2002. Even German productivity has been on the rise – 
expanding at a 1.7% annual rate over the past five quarters – 
more than double the anaemic 0.7% trend over the 1998 
to 2004 period.
The bad news is that these breakthroughs on the productivity 
front have not resulted in any meaningful improvement 
in labour's share of the pie. Therein lies the puzzle: economics 
teaches us that real wages ultimately track productivity growth – 
that workers are rewarded in accordance with their marginal 
product.   Yet that has not been the case in the high-wage 
economies of the industrial world in recent years. By our 
estimates, the real compensation share of national income 
for the so–called "G-7 plus" (the US, Japan, the 12-country 
eurozone, the UK, and Canada) fell from 56% in 2001 
to what appears to be a record low of 53.7% in 2006.
 (Note: Due to a lack of harmonised eurozone data prior 
to 1996, the compensation share cannot be extended before 
that period; however, based on BIS calculations, the slightly 
narrower construct of the wage share of G-10 national 
income is currently lower than at any point since 1975).
Of course, it is important to distinguish between the transitory 
results of the business cycle and the structural interplay between 
underlying trends in productivity and real wages. It may be that 
productivity strategies are dominated by cost cutting; with labour 
the largest slice of business production expenses, such tactics 
lead to constant pressure on the compensation share of national 
income. It may also be that the improvements in labour market 
conditions are so recent – especially in Japan and Germany – 
that the real wage lags simply haven't had time to kick in.
The US experience draws that latter hope into serious question. 
Fully ten years into a spectacular productivity revival, real wages 
remain nearly stagnant and the labour share of national income 
continues to move lower. If the flexible American worker can't 
do it, why should we presume that others in the industrial world 
would be any more fortunate?
This takes us to what could well be the biggest challenge in this 
era of globalisation – the ability of the high–wage developed world 
to convert productivity gains into increases in the labour share 
of national income. In a recent paper, Richard Freeman of Harvard, 
long one of the world's most prominent labour economists, 
underscores the very tough uphill battle that high–wage workers 
in the rich countries face in this era of globalisation. By his calculation, 
the ascendancy of China, India, and the former Soviet Union has added 
about 1.5 billion new workers to the global economy – essentially 
equaling the amount elsewhere in the world. With global trade and 
production increasingly shifting into the low-wage developing 
and transitional economies, what I have called the "global labour 
arbitrage" puts inexorable pressure on real wages in the high-wage 
industrial world.
Some would argue that the worst of the arbitrage is over – as wage 
inflation now takes off in China and India.   Don't count on it. Our 
estimates suggest that even after five years of double-digit wage 
inflation in China, hourly compensation for Chinese manufacturing 
workers remains at only 3% of levels prevailing in the major 
industrial economies.
While labour gets squeezed, the owners of capital have enjoyed 
far more flexibility in this climate. Facing extraordinary competitive 
pressures, corporations have redoubled their efforts on the productivity 
front. And, as noted above, those efforts have indeed borne fruit – 
for over a decade in the US and more recently in Japan in Germany. 
The fruits of those efforts show up in the form of surging corporate 
profitability and increased share prices – with commensurate gains 
accruing to those workers / households that are fortunate enough 
to hold shares. 
America, with its growing incidence of share ownership, has led the 
change in that regard. But this has hardly been a panacea for most 
US workers.   Federal Reserve survey data show that 63% of families 
in the upper decile of the wealth distribution owned stocks in 2004 – 
nearly four times the average 19% ownership share in the remaining 
90% of the wealth distribution; moreover, median equity holdings 
amounted to $110,000 per household in the same upper decile – 
fully 13 times average holdings of $8,350 in the remainder of the 
wealth distribution.
Don't get me wrong – this is not intended to be a replay of my ill-fated 
"worker backlash" call of the early 1990s, when I mistakenly believed 
that labour would exercise its power and demand a larger slice of the 
pie. Today, courtesy of a doubling of the world's work force and an 
increasingly potent global labour arbitrage, high-wage workers in the 
industrial world are all but powerless to act.   But their elected 
representatives are not. Witness the recent surge of protectionist 
sentiment – especially in the United States but also in Europe. Nor 
do I suspect this political backlash to globalisation will fade in the 
aftermath of the upcoming mid-term election in the United States – 
especially, as seems likely, if the Democrats garner sizable gains 
in the Congress. Pressures on high-wage workers in the industrial 
world are likely to endure for years to come – irrespective, or perhaps 
because of, the push for higher productivity growth. As a result, 
I suspect the angst of labour will remain high on the political agenda 
for the foreseeable future.
Contrary, to orthodox "win-win" theory, globalisation is a highly 
asymmetrical phenomenon. Initially, it creates far more producers 
than consumers. It also results in extraordinary imbalances between 
nations with current account deficits and surpluses.   And it has 
led to a widening disparity of the returns between labour and capital. 
Does this mean that globalisation is inherently unsustainable? 
Probably not. But it does mean that the most destabilizing phase 
of this mega-trend could well be close at hand.
As seen through surging corporate profitability, the returns to
capital have never been greater. Meanwhile the shares of labour 
income have never been lower. As day follows night, the pendulum 
will swing the other way – and so will the balance between real wages 
and business profitability. It's just a question of when – and under 
what circumstances.
By Stephen Roach, global economist at Morgan Stanley, as first 
published on Morgan Stanley's Global Economic Forum
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
17) How Bush's grandfather helped Hitler's rise to power
Rumours of a link between the US first family and the Nazi war  
machine have circulated for decades. Now the Guardian can reveal how  
repercussions of events that culminated in action under the Trading  
with the Enemy Act are still being felt by today's president
Ben Aris in Berlin and Duncan Campbell in Washington
Saturday September 25, 2004
The Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1312540,00.html
George Bush's grandfather, the late US senator Prescott Bush, was a  
director and shareholder of companies that profited from their  
involvement with the financial backers of Nazi Germany.
The Guardian has obtained confirmation from newly discovered files in  
the US National Archives that a firm of which Prescott Bush was a  
director was involved with the financial architects of Nazism.
His business dealings, which continued until his company's assets  
were seized in 1942 under the Trading with the Enemy Act, has led  
more than 60 years later to a civil action for damages being brought  
in Germany against the Bush family by two former slave labourers at  
Auschwitz and to a hum of pre-election controversy.
The evidence has also prompted one former US Nazi war crimes  
prosecutor to argue that the late senator's action should have been  
grounds for prosecution for giving aid and comfort to the enemy.
The debate over Prescott Bush's behaviour has been bubbling under the  
surface for some time. There has been a steady internet chatter about  
the "Bush/Nazi" connection, much of it inaccurate and unfair. But the  
new documents, many of which were only declassified last year, show  
that even after America had entered the war and when there was  
already significant information about the Nazis' plans and policies,  
he worked for and profited from companies closely involved with the  
very German businesses that financed Hitler's rise to power. It has  
also been suggested that the money he made from these dealings helped  
to establish the Bush family fortune and set up its political dynasty.
Remarkably, little of Bush's dealings with Germany has received  
public scrutiny, partly because of the secret status of the  
documentation involving him. But now the multibillion dollar legal  
action for damages by two Holocaust survivors against the Bush  
family, and the imminent publication of three books on the subject  
are threatening to make Prescott Bush's business history an  
uncomfortable issue for his grandson, George W, as he seeks re-election.
While there is no suggestion that Prescott Bush was sympathetic to  
the Nazi cause, the documents reveal that the firm he worked for,  
Brown Brothers Harriman (BBH), acted as a US base for the German  
industrialist, Fritz Thyssen, who helped finance Hitler in the 1930s  
before falling out with him at the end of the decade. The Guardian  
has seen evidence that shows Bush was the director of the New York- 
based Union Banking Corporation (UBC) that represented Thyssen's US  
interests and he continued to work for the bank after America entered  
the war.
Tantalising
Bush was also on the board of at least one of the companies that  
formed part of a multinational network of front companies to allow  
Thyssen to move assets around the world.
Thyssen owned the largest steel and coal company in Germany and grew  
rich from Hitler's efforts to re-arm between the two world wars. One  
of the pillars in Thyssen's international corporate web, UBC, worked  
exclusively for, and was owned by, a Thyssen-controlled bank in the  
Netherlands. More tantalising are Bush's links to the Consolidated  
Silesian Steel Company (CSSC), based in mineral rich Silesia on the  
German-Polish border. During the war, the company made use of Nazi  
slave labour from the concentration camps, including Auschwitz. The  
ownership of CSSC changed hands several times in the 1930s, but  
documents from the US National Archive declassified last year link  
Bush to CSSC, although it is not clear if he and UBC were still  
involved in the company when Thyssen's American assets were seized in  
1942.
Three sets of archives spell out Prescott Bush's involvement. All  
three are readily available, thanks to the efficient US archive  
system and a helpful and dedicated staff at both the Library of  
Congress in Washington and the National Archives at the University of  
Maryland.
The first set of files, the Harriman papers in the Library of  
Congress, show that Prescott Bush was a director and shareholder of a  
number of companies involved with Thyssen.
The second set of papers, which are in the National Archives, are  
contained in vesting order number 248 which records the seizure of  
the company assets. What these files show is that on October 20 1942  
the alien property custodian seized the assets of the UBC, of which  
Prescott Bush was a director. Having gone through the books of the  
bank, further seizures were made against two affiliates, the Holland- 
American Trading Corporation and the Seamless Steel Equipment  
Corporation. By November, the Silesian-American Company, another of  
Prescott Bush's ventures, had also been seized.
The third set of documents, also at the National Archives, are  
contained in the files on IG Farben, who was prosecuted for war crimes.
A report issued by the Office of Alien Property Custodian in 1942  
stated of the companies that "since 1939, these (steel and mining)  
properties have been in possession of and have been operated by the  
German government and have undoubtedly been of considerable  
assistance to that country's war effort".
Prescott Bush, a 6ft 4in charmer with a rich singing voice, was the  
founder of the Bush political dynasty and was once considered a  
potential presidential candidate himself. Like his son, George, and  
grandson, George W, he went to Yale where he was, again like his  
descendants, a member of the secretive and influential Skull and  
Bones student society. He was an artillery captain in the first world  
war and married Dorothy Walker, the daughter of George Herbert  
Walker, in 1921.
In 1924, his father-in-law, a well-known St Louis investment banker,  
helped set him up in business in New York with Averill Harriman, the  
wealthy son of railroad magnate E H Harriman in New York, who had  
gone into banking.
One of the first jobs Walker gave Bush was to manage UBC. Bush was a  
founding member of the bank and the incorporation documents, which  
list him as one of seven directors, show he owned one share in UBC  
worth $125.
The bank was set up by Harriman and Bush's father-in-law to provide a  
US bank for the Thyssens, Germany's most powerful industrial family.
August Thyssen, the founder of the dynasty had been a major  
contributor to Germany's first world war effort and in the 1920s, he  
and his sons Fritz and Heinrich established a network of overseas  
banks and companies so their assets and money could be whisked  
offshore if threatened again.
By the time Fritz Thyssen inherited the business empire in 1926,  
Germany's economic recovery was faltering. After hearing Adolf Hitler  
speak, Thyssen became mesmerised by the young firebrand. He joined  
the Nazi party in December 1931 and admits backing Hitler in his  
autobiography, I Paid Hitler, when the National Socialists were still  
a radical fringe party. He stepped in several times to bail out the  
struggling party: in 1928 Thyssen had bought the Barlow Palace on  
Briennerstrasse, in Munich, which Hitler converted into the Brown  
House, the headquarters of the Nazi party. The money came from  
another Thyssen overseas institution, the Bank voor Handel en  
Scheepvarrt in Rotterdam.
By the late 1930s, Brown Brothers Harriman, which claimed to be the  
world's largest private investment bank, and UBC had bought and  
shipped millions of dollars of gold, fuel, steel, coal and US  
treasury bonds to Germany, both feeding and financing Hitler's build- 
up to war.
Between 1931 and 1933 UBC bought more than $8m worth of gold, of  
which $3m was shipped abroad. According to documents seen by the  
Guardian, after UBC was set up it transferred $2m to BBH accounts and  
between 1924 and 1940 the assets of UBC hovered around $3m, dropping  
to $1m only on a few occasions.
In 1941, Thyssen fled Germany after falling out with Hitler but he  
was captured in France and detained for the remainder of the war.
There was nothing illegal in doing business with the Thyssens  
throughout the 1930s and many of America's best-known business names  
invested heavily in the German economic recovery. However, everything  
changed after Germany invaded Poland in 1939. Even then it could be  
argued that BBH was within its rights continuing business relations  
with the Thyssens until the end of 1941 as the US was still  
technically neutral until the attack on Pearl Harbor. The trouble  
started on July 30 1942 when the New York Herald-Tribune ran an  
article entitled "Hitler's Angel Has $3m in US Bank". UBC's huge gold  
purchases had raised suspicions that the bank was in fact a "secret  
nest egg" hidden in New York for Thyssen and other Nazi bigwigs. The  
Alien Property Commission (APC) launched an investigation.
There is no dispute over the fact that the US government seized a  
string of assets controlled by BBH - including UBC and SAC - in the  
autumn of 1942 under the Trading with the Enemy act. What is in  
dispute is if Harriman, Walker and Bush did more than own these  
companies on paper.
Erwin May, a treasury attache and officer for the department of  
investigation in the APC, was assigned to look into UBC's business.  
The first fact to emerge was that Roland Harriman, Prescott Bush and  
the other directors didn't actually own their shares in UBC but  
merely held them on behalf of Bank voor Handel. Strangely, no one  
seemed to know who owned the Rotterdam-based bank, including UBC's  
president.
May wrote in his report of August 16 1941: "Union Banking  
Corporation, incorporated August 4 1924, is wholly owned by the Bank  
voor Handel en Scheepvaart N.V of Rotterdam, the Netherlands. My  
investigation has produced no evidence as to the ownership of the  
Dutch bank. Mr Cornelis [sic] Lievense, president of UBC, claims no  
knowledge as to the ownership of the Bank voor Handel but believes it  
possible that Baron Heinrich Thyssen, brother of Fritz Thyssen, may  
own a substantial interest."
May cleared the bank of holding a golden nest egg for the Nazi  
leaders but went on to describe a network of companies spreading out  
from UBC across Europe, America and Canada, and how money from voor  
Handel travelled to these companies through UBC.
By September May had traced the origins of the non-American board  
members and found that Dutchman HJ Kouwenhoven - who met with  
Harriman in 1924 to set up UBC - had several other jobs: in addition  
to being the managing director of voor Handel he was also the  
director of the August Thyssen bank in Berlin and a director of Fritz  
Thyssen's Union Steel Works, the holding company that controlled  
Thyssen's steel and coal mine empire in Germany.
Within a few weeks, Homer Jones, the chief of the APC investigation  
and research division sent a memo to the executive committee of APC  
recommending the US government vest UBC and its assets. Jones named  
the directors of the bank in the memo, including Prescott Bush's  
name, and wrote: "Said stock is held by the above named individuals,  
however, solely as nominees for the Bank voor Handel, Rotterdam,  
Holland, which is owned by one or more of the Thyssen family,  
nationals of Germany and Hungary. The 4,000 shares hereinbefore set  
out are therefore beneficially owned and help for the interests of  
enemy nationals, and are vestible by the APC," according to the memo  
from the National Archives seen by the Guardian.
Red-handed
Jones recommended that the assets be liquidated for the benefit of  
the government, but instead UBC was maintained intact and eventually  
returned to the American shareholders after the war. Some claim that  
Bush sold his share in UBC after the war for $1.5m - a huge amount of  
money at the time - but there is no documentary evidence to support  
this claim. No further action was ever taken nor was the  
investigation continued, despite the fact UBC was caught red-handed  
operating a American shell company for the Thyssen family eight  
months after America had entered the war and that this was the bank  
that had partly financed Hitler's rise to power.
The most tantalising part of the story remains shrouded in mystery:  
the connection, if any, between Prescott Bush, Thyssen, Consolidated  
Silesian Steel Company (CSSC) and Auschwitz.
Thyssen's partner in United Steel Works, which had coal mines and  
steel plants across the region, was Friedrich Flick, another steel  
magnate who also owned part of IG Farben, the powerful German  
chemical company.
Flick's plants in Poland made heavy use of slave labour from the  
concentration camps in Poland. According to a New York Times article  
published in March 18 1934 Flick owned two-thirds of CSSC while  
"American interests" held the rest.
The US National Archive documents show that BBH's involvement with  
CSSC was more than simply holding the shares in the mid-1930s. Bush's  
friend and fellow "bonesman" Knight Woolley, another partner at BBH,  
wrote to Averill Harriman in January 1933 warning of problems with  
CSSC after the Poles started their drive to nationalise the plant.  
"The Consolidated Silesian Steel Company situation has become  
increasingly complicated, and I have accordingly brought in Sullivan  
and Cromwell, in order to be sure that our interests are protected,"  
wrote Knight. "After studying the situation Foster Dulles is  
insisting that their man in Berlin get into the picture and obtain  
the information which the directors here should have. You will recall  
that Foster is a director and he is particularly anxious to be  
certain that there is no liability attaching to the American directors."
But the ownership of the CSSC between 1939 when the Germans invaded  
Poland and 1942 when the US government vested UBC and SAC is not clear.
"SAC held coal mines and definitely owned CSSC between 1934 and 1935,  
but when SAC was vested there was no trace of CSSC. All concrete  
evidence of its ownership disappears after 1935 and there are only a  
few traces in 1938 and 1939," says Eva Schweitzer, the journalist and  
author whose book, America and the Holocaust, is published next month.
Silesia was quickly made part of the German Reich after the invasion,  
but while Polish factories were seized by the Nazis, those belonging  
to the still neutral Americans (and some other nationals) were  
treated more carefully as Hitler was still hoping to persuade the US  
to at least sit out the war as a neutral country. Schweitzer says  
American interests were dealt with on a case-by-case basis. The Nazis  
bought some out, but not others.
The two Holocaust survivors suing the US government and the Bush  
family for a total of $40bn in compensation claim both materially  
benefited from Auschwitz slave labour during the second world war.
Kurt Julius Goldstein, 87, and Peter Gingold, 85, began a class  
action in America in 2001, but the case was thrown out by Judge  
Rosemary Collier on the grounds that the government cannot be held  
liable under the principle of "state sovereignty".
Jan Lissmann, one of the lawyers for the survivors, said: "President  
Bush withdrew President Bill Clinton's signature from the treaty  
[that founded the court] not only to protect Americans, but also to  
protect himself and his family."
Lissmann argues that genocide-related cases are covered by  
international law, which does hold governments accountable for their  
actions. He claims the ruling was invalid as no hearing took place.
In their claims, Mr Goldstein and Mr Gingold, honorary chairman of  
the League of Anti-fascists, suggest the Americans were aware of what  
was happening at Auschwitz and should have bombed the camp.
The lawyers also filed a motion in The Hague asking for an opinion on  
whether state sovereignty is a valid reason for refusing to hear  
their case. A ruling is expected within a month.
The petition to The Hague states: "From April 1944 on, the American  
Air Force could have destroyed the camp with air raids, as well as  
the railway bridges and railway lines from Hungary to Auschwitz. The  
murder of about 400,000 Hungarian Holocaust victims could have been  
prevented."
The case is built around a January 22 1944 executive order signed by  
President Franklin Roosevelt calling on the government to take all  
measures to rescue the European Jews. The lawyers claim the order was  
ignored because of pressure brought by a group of big American  
companies, including BBH, where Prescott Bush was a director.
Lissmann said: "If we have a positive ruling from the court it will  
cause [president] Bush huge problems and make him personally liable  
to pay compensation."
The US government and the Bush family deny all the claims against them.
In addition to Eva Schweitzer's book, two other books are about to be  
published that raise the subject of Prescott Bush's business history.  
The author of the second book, to be published next year, John  
Loftus, is a former US attorney who prosecuted Nazi war criminals in  
the 70s. Now living in St Petersburg, Florida and earning his living  
as a security commentator for Fox News and ABC radio, Loftus is  
working on a novel which uses some of the material he has uncovered  
on Bush. Loftus stressed that what Prescott Bush was involved in was  
just what many other American and British businessmen were doing at  
the time.
"You can't blame Bush for what his grandfather did any more than you  
can blame Jack Kennedy for what his father did - bought Nazi stocks -  
but what is important is the cover-up, how it could have gone on so  
successfully for half a century, and does that have implications for  
us today?" he said.
"This was the mechanism by which Hitler was funded to come to power,  
this was the mechanism by which the Third Reich's defence industry  
was re-armed, this was the mechanism by which Nazi profits were  
repatriated back to the American owners, this was the mechanism by  
which investigations into the financial laundering of the Third Reich  
were blunted," said Loftus, who is vice-chairman of the Holocaust  
Museum in St Petersburg.
"The Union Banking Corporation was a holding company for the Nazis,  
for Fritz Thyssen," said Loftus. "At various times, the Bush family  
has tried to spin it, saying they were owned by a Dutch bank and it  
wasn't until the Nazis took over Holland that they realised that now  
the Nazis controlled the apparent company and that is why the Bush  
supporters claim when the war was over they got their money back.  
Both the American treasury investigations and the intelligence  
investigations in Europe completely bely that, it's absolute  
horseshit. They always knew who the ultimate beneficiaries were."
"There is no one left alive who could be prosecuted but they did get  
away with it," said Loftus. "As a former federal prosecutor, I would  
make a case for Prescott Bush, his father-in-law (George Walker) and  
Averill Harriman [to be prosecuted] for giving aid and comfort to the  
enemy. They remained on the boards of these companies knowing that  
they were of financial benefit to the nation of Germany."
Loftus said Prescott Bush must have been aware of what was happening  
in Germany at the time. "My take on him was that he was a not  
terribly successful in-law who did what Herbert Walker told him to.  
Walker and Harriman were the two evil geniuses, they didn't care  
about the Nazis any more than they cared about their investments with  
the Bolsheviks."
What is also at issue is how much money Bush made from his  
involvement. His supporters suggest that he had one token share.  
Loftus disputes this, citing sources in "the banking and intelligence  
communities" and suggesting that the Bush family, through George  
Herbert Walker and Prescott, got $1.5m out of the involvement. There  
is, however, no paper trail to this sum.
The third person going into print on the subject is John Buchanan,  
54, a Miami-based magazine journalist who started examining the files  
while working on a screenplay. Last year, Buchanan published his  
findings in the venerable but small-circulation New Hampshire Gazette  
under the headline "Documents in National Archives Prove George  
Bush's Grandfather Traded With the Nazis - Even After Pearl Harbor".  
He expands on this in his book to be published next month - Fixing  
America: Breaking the Stranglehold of Corporate Rule, Big Media and  
the Religious Right.
In the article, Buchanan, who has worked mainly in the trade and  
music press with a spell as a muckraking reporter in Miami, claimed  
that "the essential facts have appeared on the internet and in  
relatively obscure books but were dismissed by the media and Bush  
family as undocumented diatribes".
Buchanan suffers from hypermania, a form of manic depression, and  
when he found himself rebuffed in his initial efforts to interest the  
media, he responded with a series of threats against the journalists  
and media outlets that had spurned him. The threats, contained in e- 
mails, suggested that he would expose the journalists as "traitors to  
the truth".
Unsurprisingly, he soon had difficulty getting his calls returned.  
Most seriously, he faced aggravated stalking charges in Miami, in  
connection with a man with whom he had fallen out over the best way  
to publicise his findings. The charges were dropped last month.
Biography
Buchanan said he regretted his behaviour had damaged his credibility  
but his main aim was to secure publicity for the story. Both Loftus  
and Schweitzer say Buchanan has come up with previously undisclosed  
documentation.
The Bush family have largely responded with no comment to any  
reference to Prescott Bush. Brown Brothers Harriman also declined to  
comment.
The Bush family recently approved a flattering biography of Prescott  
Bush entitled Duty, Honour, Country by Mickey Herskowitz. The  
publishers, Rutledge Hill Press, promised the book would "deal  
honestly with Prescott Bush's alleged business relationships with  
Nazi industrialists and other accusations".
In fact, the allegations are dealt with in less than two pages. The  
book refers to the Herald-Tribune story by saying that "a person of  
less established ethics would have panicked ... Bush and his partners  
at Brown Brothers Harriman informed the government regulators that  
the account, opened in the late 1930s, was 'an unpaid courtesy for a  
client' ... Prescott Bush acted quickly and openly on behalf of the  
firm, served well by a reputation that had never been compromised. He  
made available all records and all documents. Viewed six decades  
later in the era of serial corporate scandals and shattered careers,  
he received what can be viewed as the ultimate clean bill."
The Prescott Bush story has been condemned by both conservatives and  
some liberals as having nothing to do with the current president. It  
has also been suggested that Prescott Bush had little to do with  
Averill Harriman and that the two men opposed each other politically.
However, documents from the Harriman papers include a flattering  
wartime profile of Harriman in the New York Journal American and next  
to it in the files is a letter to the financial editor of that paper  
from Prescott Bush congratulating the paper for running the profile.  
He added that Harriman's "performance and his whole attitude has been  
a source of inspiration and pride to his partners and his friends".
The Anti-Defamation League in the US is supportive of Prescott Bush  
and the Bush family. In a statement last year they said that "rumours  
about the alleged Nazi 'ties' of the late Prescott Bush ... have  
circulated widely through the internet in recent years. These charges  
are untenable and politically motivated ... Prescott Bush was neither  
a Nazi nor a Nazi sympathiser."
However, one of the country's oldest Jewish publications, the Jewish  
Advocate, has aired the controversy in detail.
More than 60 years after Prescott Bush came briefly under scrutiny at  
the time of a faraway war, his grandson is facing a different kind of  
scrutiny but one underpinned by the same perception that, for some  
people, war can be a profitable business.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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18) C.I.A. Wants Prison Tactics Secret
By SCOTT SHANE
November 4, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/04/us/04cia.html?hp&ex=1162702800&en=d6555a02fd066d9c&ei=5094&partner=homepage
The Central Intelligence Agency has told a federal court that Qaeda 
suspects should not be permitted to describe publicly the “alternative 
interrogation methods” used in secret C.I.A. prisons overseas.
In papers filed in the case of Majid Khan, a Pakistani who is among 
14 so-called “high-value detainees” recently transferred to the 
Guantánamo Bay detention camp in Cuba, Justice Department 
and C.I.A. officials argued that allowing Mr. Khan to disclose details 
of his treatment could cause “extremely grave damage to the 
national security.”
“Many terrorist operatives are specifically trained in counter-
interrogation techniques,” says a declaration by Marilyn A. Dorn, 
an official at the National Clandestine Service, a part of the C.IA. 
“If specific alternative techniques were disclosed, it would permit 
terrorist organizations to adapt their training to counter the tactics 
that C.I.A. can employ in interrogations.”
The court filings, first reported by The Washington Post on its Web 
site Friday night, also argued that revealing the countries where the 
prisoners were held could undermine intelligence relationships with 
those governments. Such disclosures “would put our allies at risk 
of terrorist retaliation and betray relationships that are built 
on trust and are vital to our efforts against terrorism,” 
Ms. Dorn wrote.
Lawyers for Mr. Khan, who lived in Maryland for several years 
and is accused of researching how to blow up gasoline stations 
and poison reservoirs, have alleged that he was tortured while 
in American custody and falsely confessed to crimes.
Intelligence officials have acknowledged that some terrorism 
suspects were subjected to harsh interrogation techniques, 
including sleep deprivation, exposure to heat and cold and 
a simulated drowning technique. Human rights advocates 
believe the methods amount to torture, which is banned 
by international law, but United States officials deny the charge.
Mr. Khan is represented by Gitanjali S. Gutierrez, a lawyer 
with the Center for Constitutional Rights in New York, which 
has been in touch with his wife, Rabia Khan, according 
to court documents.
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19) German Detainee Questions His Country’s Role
By MARK LANDLER and SOUAD MEKHENNET
November 4, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/04/world/europe/04germany.html?ref=world
BREMEN, Germany, Nov. 2 — During the four and a half years 
he languished in American prison camps in Afghanistan and 
Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, Murat Kurnaz claims to have been beaten, 
locked alone for months, dunked in water, sexually humiliated and 
hung from the ceiling by chains — all of which the Pentagon denies.
But the Americans eventually decided not to hold him any longer 
on suspicion of being a terrorist with ties to Al Qaeda. In late August 
he was finally released, a result of negotiations between the United 
States and Germany, where he was born 24 years ago into a Turkish 
family.
Now back home in Bremen, and recently cleared by his own 
government, he is struggling to make sense of his odyssey. 
He blames not just his American captors but also the German 
government, which according to internal intelligence documents 
turned down an offer by the United States to send him home 
in late 2002.
“The first time, the Americans kept me in Guantánamo; the 
second time, the Germans did,” Mr. Kurnaz said in an interview, 
speaking English, which he learned during his captivity. “They 
did the same as the American government.”
Mr. Kurnaz’s tale of wrongful imprisonment reinforces the worst 
suspicions of many Europeans about the detention of suspected 
terrorists at Guantánamo Bay. The camp’s existence is perhaps 
the main obstacle to healing the rift between United States 
and Europe that was opened by the Iraq war, and magnified 
by diverging approaches to civil liberties.
Yet his account pointedly calls into question Germany’s role, 
suggesting that the Germans decided to abandon him because 
he was a Turkish citizen, though born and living in Germany, 
and that they even contributed to his ordeal. His case has ignited 
a political firestorm in Germany, raising questions about whether 
this country sacrificed its principles in supporting the American-
led campaign against terrorism.
Mr. Kurnaz says his troubles stemmed from a poorly timed visit 
to Pakistan in October 2001, a month after the attacks on the 
World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Within weeks he was pulled 
off a bus in Pakistan, and by January 2002 he was sent to an 
American prison in Kandahar, in southern Afghanistan.
While he was there, he said, German soldiers slammed his head 
on the ground and kicked him, to the laughter of American soldiers 
watching. Germany’s Defense Ministry said there was no evidence 
its soldiers had mistreated Mr. Kurnaz. The ministry at first denied 
its soldiers were even active in southern Afghanistan, but later 
conceded they had been there and had contact with Mr. Kurnaz.
“I was born in Germany; I live in Germany,” he said. “It’s hard 
to see something like that from Germans, to be treated like that 
by Germans. You think the government of your country will 
help you.”
A Pentagon spokesman, Lt. Cmdr. Chito Peppler, said Mr. Kurnaz 
had been treated humanely in Afghanistan and Cuba. He was 
allowed to exercise, as well as to send and receive letters. 
Commander Peppler said Mr. Kurnaz was released after 
lengthy discussions with the German government, “when 
the United States determined that conditions were appropriate 
for his transfer.”
A stocky man with flowing reddish brown hair and a long, 
bushy beard, Mr. Kurnaz described his experience in a matter-
of-fact tone, leavened with flashes of mordant humor. Only 
when he talked about Germany did his speech become halting, 
the words measured out painfully.
“The soldier grabbed my hair and pulled back my head,” 
Mr. Kurnaz recalled. “He asked, ‘Do you know who we are? 
We are the German force, K.S.K.’ ” (The initials refer to an elite 
army unit.) “He hit my head, and then either he or his friend 
kicked me, and everyone laughed.”
Mr. Kurnaz’s years in prison and his charge of mistreatment 
by two governments have created an uproar in Germany. 
“In this case, it was the moral obligation of Germany to do 
something,” said Cem Ozdemir, a German member of the 
European Parliament, which is investigating the detention 
of suspected terrorists.
“They chose to close their eyes, and didn’t do anything,” 
said Mr. Ozdemir, who is of Turkish descent.
The German Foreign Ministry declined to comment on secret 
government documents that were submitted to Parliament 
as part of a review of the Kurnaz case. The documents, which 
were seen by a reporter for The New York Times, indicated 
that Germany had rejected an American offer to return 
Mr. Kurnaz.
In one, German intelligence suggested that he should be sent 
to Turkey instead. The documents note that the Americans 
had been puzzled by the German response.
With public criticism mounting, the German Parliament has 
opened its formal investigation into how the government 
handled Mr. Kurnaz’s case. The Defense Ministry has begun 
its own investigation.
The case has become a lingering headache for Chancellor 
Angela Merkel. Under mounting public pressure, she set the 
wheels in motion for Mr. Kurnaz’s release by raising his case 
in a meeting in January with President Bush.
But the previous German government’s dealings involve the 
current foreign minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, who was 
then chief of staff to Chancellor Gerhard Schröder. Mr. Schröder 
said recently that he knew nothing about the case while he was 
chancellor — a claim that drew a sardonic response from Mr. Kurnaz.
“Smart guy,” he said.
Mr. Kurnaz says he went to Pakistan because he and a Turkish 
friend from Bremen, Selcuk Bilgin, had wanted to immerse 
themselves in Islam.
Mr. Bilgin was detained at the Frankfurt airport on Oct. 3, 2001, 
when authorities found the record of an unrelated misdemeanor 
charge, and Mr. Kurnaz set off alone. Once in Pakistan, he traveled 
from mosque to mosque under the auspices of Tablighi Jamaat, 
a South Asian Islamic missionary group that is active in Europe.
Mr. Kurnaz, whose family is not deeply religious, said he was 
attracted to the group because of the work it did with drug users 
and homeless people. Having married in Turkey that summer, 
Mr. Kurnaz said he felt this was his last chance to travel and 
study Islam before settling down.
At the time, he said, he believed there was little danger in going 
to Pakistan, since he did not plan to cross into Afghanistan. 
In Peshawar, however, the Pakistani police detained Mr. Kurnaz 
during a routine roadside check; according to his account, 
he was later turned over to the Americans for a bounty of $3,000. 
Mr. Kurnaz said he was then moved to Kandahar, which he recalls 
as the darkest period of his confinement.
“It was the beginning, so there were absolutely no rules,” he said 
of his early captivity by the Americans. “They had the right 
to do anything. They used to beat us every time. They did 
use electroshocks. They dived my head in the water.”
American officials who interrogated Mr. Kurnaz accused him 
of being a terrorist and a member of Al Qaeda, he said. They 
asked him if he knew Mohamed Atta, the Egyptian hijacker 
who, in Hamburg, only an hour’s ride from Bremen, had 
plotted the Sept. 11 attacks.
The prisoners were kept outside, behind wire fences, with 
only thin jumpsuits to protect them in the winter, Mr. Kurnaz 
said. It was during this period, he said, that he encountered 
the two German soldiers.
Around the beginning of February 2002, Mr. Kurnaz reckons, 
he was flown to Cuba (he said he was not sure of the date, 
as prisoners were not allowed to see clocks or calendars). 
Mr. Kurnaz, an animal lover who used to keep birds and dogs, 
said he knew where he was after landing because he saw 
an iguana and a hummingbird that were native to Cuba.
Life in Guantánamo was less brutal than in Kandahar. Still, 
Mr. Kurnaz said, he spent more than half of his first two years 
there in a cell by himself after breaking an early rule that 
prohibited working out.
“I was pretty famous because I used to train a lot,” said 
Mr. Kurnaz, who boxed in Germany. “They punished me every 
time.” Some of the guards, he said, were nevertheless fascinated 
by his strict regimen. “They used to call me the push-up king,” 
he said with a trace of a smile.
At his Combatant Status Review Tribunal in 2004, Mr. Kurnaz 
learned that he had been classified as an “enemy combatant” 
because of his association with Tablighi Jamaat, which the 
American government suspects of supporting Islamic terrorism, 
and also because of his friendship with Mr. Bilgin, who American 
officials said might have carried out a suicide bombing.
“He was absolutely not that kind of person,” Mr. Kurnaz said. 
“I said, ‘How can a human being change so much in just a few 
years?’ But I believed it.” (Mr. Bilgin is now living in Bremen, according 
to officials. Mr. Kurnaz said he had not seen him, and calls him 
an “ex-friend.”)
German authorities investigated suggestions that Mr. Kurnaz had 
associated with radical Islamic figures, but found no evidence 
that he had ties to terrorist groups. In Guantánamo, he said, 
he was interrogated twice by German officials. The officials, 
who did not identify themselves, told him that if he gave the 
right answers, it would help his case, he said.
In the end, the evidence did not hold up to judicial scrutiny. 
A Federal District Court judge, Joyce Hens Green, concluded 
in early 2005 that even the classified portion of his file was 
“rife with hearsay.”
More than a year later, in July, Mr. Kurnaz returned to a chilly r
eception in Germany, where he was nicknamed the “Taliban 
of Bremen” by the news media. The German government 
reinstated an investigation of his ties to Al Qaeda but, 
finding no evidence, formally cleared him. His wife filed 
for divorce while he was away.
Lawyers for Mr. Kurnaz are considering lawsuits against both 
the American and German governments. But he said a financial 
settlement alone would not compensate for what was taken 
from him.
“I left all those years in prison,” Mr. Kurnaz said. “Nobody could 
give them back, even if they gave me several million dollars. 
Cars and houses, you can buy. Freedom, you can’t buy.”
Victor Homola contributed reporting from Berlin.
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
20) Abu Ghraib Abuser Won’t Be Redeployed
By REUTERS
November 4, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/04/world/middleeast/04canine.html
WASHINGTON, Nov. 3 (Reuters) — American military commanders 
reversed plans to send a soldier convicted of offenses at the Abu 
Ghraib prison back to Iraq, the Army said on Friday. The reversal 
followed news reports saying the man would be deployed.
Specialist Santos A. Cardona, a dog handler during his assignment 
at Abu Ghraib, was convicted in June of using his dog to assault 
a prisoner at the jail, which is outside Baghdad.
He was sent with his military police unit from the United States 
to Kuwait late last month and had been preparing to return to 
Iraq, the Army said.
But after a reporter called to ask about the deployment and news 
of it began to spread, senior commanders ordered Specialist 
Cardona to stay in Kuwait, fearing he and his unit could be 
singled out by insurgents because of his role at Abu Ghraib.
Later on Friday, they announced that he would return to his 
base at Fort Bragg, N.C.
The Army offered no explanation as to why Mr. Cardona’s 
unit commanders had planned to deploy him, given his 
record in Iraq. The abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib came 
to light after pictures of it were discovered in 2004.
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
21) A Job Prospect Lures, Then Frustrates, Thousands
By ANTHONY RAMIREZ
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/04/nyregion/04jobs.html?ref=nyregion
The call for job applications seemed routine; certainly nobody 
at corporate headquarters gave it much thought. A new candy 
store that would be opening in Times Square needed workers. 
Starting pay was $10.75 an hour.
But by midmorning yesterday, a huge, swelling, discontented 
crowd of job seekers was milling around the sidewalks of Midtown 
Manhattan, not far from Macy’s in Herald Square, filling the 
air with curses.
The crowd put a human face on jobless statistics at a time when 
the city’s unemployment rate, 4.5 percent in September, was the 
lowest since 1988.
Several thousand people — mostly young, black and Hispanic — 
had shown up to apply for fewer than 200 positions, only 65 
of them full-time jobs. They came, they said, because of a phrase 
that had leapt out of the advertisements for the jobs: “on-the-spot 
hiring.” But there were too many people clogging the sidewalk 
outside the building on Eighth Avenue between 35th and 36th 
Streets where the company was conducting interviews, and 
everyone was abruptly told to go home and mail in the job 
applications.
Tamika Jones, 28, a Brooklyn mother of three school-age children, 
looked at the faces of other disappointed job-seekers and said: 
“This is what unemployment looks like in New York City. 
I wanted to cry.”
Alphonzo Puzie, 31, from the Bronx, used to work in a laundry 
and is desperate for work. “I was very disappointed,” he said. 
“It burns the spirit.”
Many had arranged for baby sitters, traveled from other boroughs 
and New Jersey, and lined up as early as 1 a.m., only to be told 
eventually that there were no more jobs being offered that day.
The doors to the building at 519 Eighth Avenue were supposed 
to open at 10 a.m., but because of the large crowd, officials 
opened them an hour earlier.
Midtown South, the precinct house around the corner on 35th 
Street, dispatched traffic officers and officers on horseback 
because of the swelling crowds.
Sgt. Kevin Hayes, a Police Department spokesman, said, “We 
responded to the location based upon the amount of people that 
had gathered.” Four people were given summonses for disorderly 
conduct and released, he said. An ambulance was called for one
man who had suffered an asthma attack.
Mars Inc., the maker of M&M candies, is opening the store next 
month, at 1600 Broadway, at 48th Street, a few feet away from 
the store of its rival, Hershey’s.
Mars needs cashiers, receptionists, shippers, people to wear 
M&M costumes, and workers called “customer service ambassadors.” 
The starting pay, $10.75 an hour, is much higher than the state’s 
$6.75 minimum wage.
Newspaper advertisements and fliers promised more: “medical, 
dental, vision, 401(k) plan, paid time off, tuition reimbursement 
plan, bonus potential and opportunity for growth.”
The flier added, “The Rewards Are Sweet!”
“Why did they make us wait out here so long?” said Assana Lloyd, 
24, of the Bronx. “It was cold and windy.” Young men and women 
stubbed out cigarettes on the sidewalks and complained bitterly.
Jose Muñoz, 19, of Queens, stood in line and lost out on a day’s 
pay as a driver’s helper for United Parcel Service. A part-time 
employee, he makes $8 an hour, he said, and hoped for a Mars 
position because “this was a full-time job.”
Not every applicant was young. Michel Ernest, 47, of Brooklyn, 
used to work in a recycling plant in Passaic, N.J. “I want any kind 
of job,” he said. “I’ll work in the kitchen if they have a kitchen.”
Phil Levine, a spokesman for the Mars Retail Group, which is in 
charge of hiring for the Times Square store, said the company 
had been caught off guard by the turnout.
“Much to our surprise and amazement,” he said, “there were 
a lot more people who wanted to work for us than we expected.” 
Mars had expected only several hundred applicants, and planned 
to spend six days filling the positions.
Now it is rethinking its strategy and is asking everyone to mail 
in applications or apply online at www.mmsworld.com.
Mars interviewed several dozen people and hired “a handful” 
before it suspended interviews, said Rebecca Cisek, a Mars 
spokeswoman.
“When the crowds became unmanageable,” she said, “it became 
clear we couldn’t possibly talk to all these people.”
Mars has two other M&M stores, in Las Vegas and Orlando, 
and did not have a similar job crush at those places. “Most 
people would not have expected 5,000 to 6,000 to show up 
for a few hundred jobs,” Mr. Levine said.
Sunny Choudhry, owner of Creative Graphic & Sign Inc., saw 
the line curling in front of his shop at 36th Street and Ninth 
Avenue.
“All those people applying for that many jobs,” he said. 
“It’s so sad that it’s funny.”
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
22) Accessory for a U.S. Border Fence: 
A Welcome Mat for Foreign Loans
By FLOYD NORRIS
November 4, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/04/business/04charts.html
Mexico has been a popular topic in the run-up to this year’s 
Congressional elections, but not in any way the Mexicans 
have enjoyed.
Congressional Republicans, seeking a popular initiative to improve 
their position with voters, scheduled a series of hearings this 
summer on the threat of immigration, and then passed a bill 
authorizing, but not paying for, a 700-mile fence on the United 
States border with Mexico.
That bill left out provisions sought by President Bush that would 
have made it possible for some illegal aliens to obtain American 
citizenship eventually.
And while there are doubts about how much good a fence would 
do — the border is 2,000 miles long and many illegal immigrants 
enter on visas and fail to leave — there seems to be little doubt 
that many Americans are worried about Mexico, both as a source 
of illegal immigrants and as a destination for jobs. The North 
American Free Trade Agreement has been denounced in some 
campaigns.
But in a campaign appearance near New York this week, former 
President Bill Clinton pointed to another role Mexico now plays, 
as the 10th-largest international lender to the United States. 
Debtors, perhaps, should be nice to their creditors.
The chart accompanying this table shows the 10 countries 
now with the largest ownership of United States Treasury 
securities, including both private and public lenders. The 
figures also show how much the holdings have grown since 
the end of 2000, just before President Bush took office.
Over all, Mexico’s holdings of U.S. Treasury securities have 
risen 175 percent since the end of 2000, faster than the overall 
foreign increase of 112 percent, but far below the 462 percent 
gain in Chinese holdings. All told, Japan, China and Hong 
Kong now hold $1.03 trillion in U.S. Treasuries — more 
than all foreign countries combined held at the end of 2000.
There are limitations to the figures, as they can obscure 
ultimate owners. A Treasury security held by a British 
money manager on behalf of a Japanese client will show 
up as being held in Britain, a fact that helps to explain 
why that country ranks third on the list.
The other chart shows the extent to which the soaring 
supply of Treasury securities has been soaked up overseas.
 Figures from the Federal Reserve indicate that at the end 
of 2000, there were $2.8 trillion in Treasury securities 
outstanding, excluding those held by the Fed itself. 
Of those, $1 trillion, or about 36 percent, were held 
overseas.
By the end of June this year, the latest figures available, 
another $1.1 trillion had been added to the supply 
of Treasuries, increasing the figure by 40 percent. 
But only $140 million of the new supply was sold 
to Americans; the rest is overseas.
A result is that Americans now own less than half the 
outstanding Treasuries. American politicians may not 
be happy to see foreigners moving to their country, 
but they have been quite happy to take loans from them.
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
23) Give a Break to Americans Giving Birth
By M. P. DUNLEAVEY
November 4, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/04/business/04instincts.html
Last month, The Washington Post ran one of those nauseating stories 
about all the fabulous maternity benefits women in France get: months 
of paid leave, government subsidies, free or low-cost day care 
and so on.
I realize that nations like France, Japan, Sweden and others have 
reasons for providing generous financial support for new moms — 
stagnant population growth being one. But after taking my own 
meager maternity leave, mostly unpaid, hearing about policies 
like that makes me furious.
I’m ashamed to admit this, but it has taken 40 years and the 
birth of my own child — five weeks ago, as I write — to awaken 
me to the fact that the United States is the only industrialized 
country that doesn’t guarantee some sort of paid leave 
to new mothers.
According to a 2004 study by Jody Heymann, an associate 
professor at the Harvard School of Public Health, more than 
160 countries offer some sort of leave for new mothers, 
paid by the government. Those that don’t include Papua 
New Guinea, Swaziland, Lesotho — and the United States.
Perhaps I shouldn’t have been surprised. But I’d been riding 
on the blithe assumption that women in America were entitled 
to three months of maternity leave under the provisions 
of the Family and Medical Leave Act. I also had some rosy 
notion that if you didn’t qualify for leave under that law, 
most employers would offer maternity benefits.
I could not have been more wrong. “A lot of women don’t 
understand these policies, and they are very surprised 
by how little protection they offer,” said Debra L. Ness, 
president of the National Partnership for Women and 
Families, an advocacy group in Washington.
The Family and Medical Leave Act provides up to 12 weeks 
of unpaid leave for men and women. And even then it covers 
only people who have worked basically full time for at least 
one year at companies with 50 or more employees, said Joan 
Blades, the co-founder of MomsRising.org, an online 
organization that promotes family-friendly policies 
in the workplace. “That means about 40 percent of working 
women don’t qualify for leave under the F.M.L.A.,” she said.
And don’t count on employers to provide benefits that 
might bridge those gaps. The number of employees who 
get fully paid maternity leave of any length dropped to 18 
percent in 2005 from 27 percent in 1998, according to the 
Families and Work Institute, a nonprofit research organization 
in New York. Only 7 percent of employers offered at least 
six weeks of maternity leave with at least some pay.
When Jamie Oliver was expecting her first child in 2004, she 
was appalled by the maternity leave policy at her former job 
as an urban planner for the city of Portsmouth, Va. “My boss 
told me I’d be eligible for 12 weeks under the Family and Medical 
Leave Act — but she didn’t make it clear that I wouldn’t be paid 
by anyone but me,” Ms. Oliver said.
Ms. Oliver ended up using two weeks of paid vacation time, 
“and my husband and I covered six more weeks with what 
we were able to save in the months before I gave birth,” she 
said. “It was pretty tight.”
I know about tight. Although one of the publications I write 
for was able to give me a month off with full pay, my husband 
and I struggled to pull together the extra money we needed 
to cover my own very brief maternity leave.
But if I’ve learned one thing, it’s that this isn’t about any one 
woman’s predicament, it’s about the disturbing state of affairs 
in this country.
In 2002, California passed the Paid Family Leave Act, the first 
state law that offers most citizens six weeks of paid family leave 
benefits. Benefits are paid from a common fund to which employees 
statewide contribute via payroll deductions of less than $30 a year.
It’s a modest program, and you’d think the other 49 states 
would have jumped to emulate it. But here it is, four years 
later, and according to Ms. Ness, while about two dozens 
states are considering some legislation that might offer families 
some paid leave, only Massachusetts is close to passing a law 
as comprehensive as California’s.
“It’s embarrassing that a country that talks so much about family 
values has done so little to support working families,” she said.
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
24) Army Recruiters Accused of Misleading 
Students to Get Them to Enlist
Colonel Says Incidents Are the Exception, Not the Rule
November 3, 2006
http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=2626032&page=1
Nov. 3, 2006 — - An ABC News undercover investigation showed 
Army recruiters telling students that the war in Iraq was over, 
in an effort to get them to enlist.
ABC News and New York affiliate WABC equipped students with 
hidden video cameras before they visited 10 Army recruitment 
offices in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.
"Nobody is going over to Iraq anymore?" one student asks 
a recruiter.
"No, we're bringing people back," he replies.
"We're not at war. War ended a long time ago," another 
recruiter says.
Last year, the Army suspended recruiting nationwide to 
retrain recruiters following hundreds of allegations 
of improprieties.
One Colorado student taped a recruiting session posing 
as a drug-addicted dropout.
"You mean I'm not going to get in trouble?" the student asked.
The recruiters told him no, and helped him cheat to sign up.
During the ABC News sessions, some recruiters told our students 
if they enlisted, there would be little chance they'd to go Iraq.
But Col. Robert Manning, who is in charge of U.S. Army 
recruiting for the entire Northeast, said that new recruits 
were likely to go to Iraq.
"I would not disagree with that," Manning said. "We are 
a nation and Army at war still."
Manning looked at the ABC News video of his recruiters.
"It's hard to believe some of things they are telling prospective 
applicants," Manning said. "I still believe that this is the exception 
more than the norm. … I've visited many stations myself, and 
I know that we have many wonderful Americans serving in uniform 
as recruiters."
Yet ABC News found one recruiter who even claimed if you 
didn't like the Army, you could just quit.
"It's called a 'Failure to Adapt' discharge," the recruiter said. 
"It's an entry-level discharge so it won't affect anything on 
your record. It'll just be like it never happened."
Manning, however, disagrees with the ease the recruiter 
describes.
"I would believe it's not as easy as he would lead you 
to believe it is," he said.
Sue Niederer, whose son, Seth, joined the Army in 2002, 
said she was all too familiar with recruiters' lies.
"They need to do anything they possibly can to get 
recruits," Niederer said.
Seth was sent to Iraq and was killed by a roadside bomb.
Niederer said she was not surprised by what ABC News 
had found. She believes it's still a widespread problem. 
She said that recruiters told Seth he wouldn't be put into combat.
"Ninety percent [are] going to be putting their lives on the line 
for our country," she said. "Tell them the truth. That's all. 
Just tell them the truth."
Copyright © 2006 ABC News Internet Ventures
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
LINKS AND VERY SHORT STORIES 
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
FOCUS | British Believe Bush Is More Dangerous Than Kim Jong-il
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/110306Z.shtml
America is now seen as a threat to world peace by its closest 
neighbours and allies, according to an international survey of public opinion 
published today that reveals just how far the country's reputation has 
fallen among former supporters since the invasion of Iraq. 
 
Jobless Rate Hits 5-Year Low
By JEREMY W. PETERS
November 4, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/04/business/04job.html?ref=business
Texas: Wider Audience for Border Cameras
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Texas has started broadcasting live images of the Mexican border 
on the Internet in a program that asks the public to report signs 
of illegal immigration or drug crimes. A test Web site, 
texasborderwatch.com, went live Thursday with views from 
eight cameras and ways for viewers to e-mail reports of suspicious 
activity. Previously, the images had been available only to law 
enforcement and landowners where the cameras are located. 
Some civil rights groups have said use of the cameras would 
instill fear in border communities and could lead to racial 
profiling and fraudulent reports of crimes.
November 4, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/04/us/04brfs-TEXASWIDERAU_BRF.html
98 Percent of Cluster Bombs Victims are Civilians
Ann De Ron, Electronic Lebanon, 2 November 2006
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article5930.shtml
Ford Salaried Workers Won’t Get Raises, and Benefits Will Be Cut
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DEARBORN, Mich., Nov. 2 (AP) — Salaried workers at Ford Motor 
will not receive raises next year and they will pay more for health 
insurance under benefit changes announced by the company.
In addition, Ford will stop providing health insurance for Medicare-
eligible salaried retirees over 65 starting in January 2008, a company 
spokeswoman, Marcey Evans, said Thursday.
Ford will give the retirees $1,800 that can be used to buy 
supplemental medical coverage, she said.
Ford lost $7.24 billion in the first nine months and is cutting 
thousands of jobs and closing plants to cut costs over the 
next few years.
As part of the changes, Ford is also restoring a company match 
to its 401(k) plan, paying 60 cents on the dollar up to 5 percent 
of an employee’s base salary.
But the elimination of merit pay raises and a 30 percent increase 
n health insurance contributions will mean that white-collar 
workers will receive less money in 2007 than they received this year.
November 3, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/03/business/03ford.html
With Election Driven by Iraq, Voters Want New Approach
By ADAM NAGOURNEY and MEGAN THEE
November 2, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/02/us/politics/02poll.html
 
Striking Janitors Block Houston Traffic
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 12:20 p.m. ET
HOUSTON (AP) -- Striking janitors demanding higher wages and better 
insurance benefits staged a sit-in at one of the city's busiest 
intersections.
About 150 members of the Service Employees International Union 
disrupted traffic in Houston's upscale Galleria shopping district 
for about 90 minutes Thursday. A dozen community activists who 
joined the protest chained themselves to metal garbage cans and 
sat in the middle of the street. They were arrested and charged 
with obstructing a pathway.
More than 1,700 janitors have been on strike since Oct. 23, when 
talks broke down with several of the city's commercial cleaning 
companies. The strike has targeted about 60 buildings in the 
city's downtown and shopping district. Workers want a pay 
increase to $8.50 an hour, up from the current average 
of $5.30, plus more guaranteed hours of work and medical 
insurance.
Dozens of protesters linked arms and formed a human chain 
to stop cars from passing through the intersection during 
the demonstration.
Protesters waved picket signs, beat drums and chanted upbeat 
slogans of ''Si se puede'' (Yes, we can) and ''Aqui estamos, 
no nos vamos'' (Here we are, and we're not leaving).
The rally rankled many drivers trapped in traffic, including 
a few who tried to bulldoze their way through the demonstrators. 
Others shrugged at the unexpected delay and said they 
supported the strikers.
November 3, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Janitors-Strike.html
U.S. Web Archive Is Said to Reveal a Nuclear Primer
By WILLIAM J. BROAD
November 3, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/03/world/middleeast/03cnd-documents.html?ref=world
Congress Tells Auditor in Iraq to Close Office
By JAMES GLANZ
November 3, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/03/world/middleeast/03reconstruct.html?ref=world
Father of Missing U.S. Soldier Says Son Just 
Made a Mistake in Quest to Find His Calling
By PAUL von ZIELBAUER
November 3, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/03/world/middleeast/03soldier.html
With Wages on Ballots, Restaurateurs Do the Math
By REGAN MORRIS
November 2, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/02/business/02sbiz.html?ref=business
Finally, a Life Resumed
By JEFF VANDAM
AFTER 22 years in Dannemora, Sing Sing, Attica, Great Meadow, 
Elmira and the Downstate Correctional Facility at Fishkill, Alan 
Newton came home to the Bronx one unremarkable day last July, 
his age doubled, his life renewed. As had been proved incontrovertibly, 
he did not commit the crimes that made the prisons of New York 
State his home for more than two decades.
October 29, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/29/nyregion/thecity/29dna.html?ref=thecity
Immigrant Workers’ Rights Violated, A.C.L.U. Charges
By NINA BERNSTEIN
November 2, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/02/nyregion/02suit.html?ref=nyregion
As the Jobs Go South, the Hope Goes With Them
By CHARLIE LeDUFF
October 30, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/30/us/30album.html
U.S. Soldier Murdered By Iraqi Police -- And Then the Cover-up 
An article in today's Washington Post reveals that an American 
soldier was ambushed and killed this month in Baghdad by our 
alleged allies in the local police. What it doesn't say is that the 
official reports on his death by the U.S. military were complete 
distortions. 
By Greg Mitchell 
http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/columns/pressingissues_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003317039
Revealed: U.S. Soldier Killed Herself After Objecting 
to Interrogation Techniques 
The true stories of how American troops, killed in Iraq, 
actually died keep spilling out this week. Now we learn, 
thanks to a reporter's FOIA request, that one of the first 
women to die in Iraq shot and killed herself after objecting t
o harsh "interrogation techniques." 
By Greg Mitchell 
http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/columns/pressingissues_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003345862
Pennsylvania: Anti-Immigration Law Blocked
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A federal judge blocked a tough ordinance singling out illegal 
immigrants in Hazelton. The ordinance, approved by the City 
Council in September and scheduled to go into effect today, 
levies fines on landlords who rent to illegal immigrants and 
denies business permits to companies that give them jobs. 
The judge, James Munley of Federal District Court, ruled that 
landlords, tenants and businesses that cater to Hispanics faced 
“irreparable harm” from the measure and issued a restraining 
order through Nov. 14.
November 1, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/01/us/01brfs-005.html
Military Charts Movement of Conflict in Iraq Toward Chaos
By MICHAEL R. GORDON
November 1, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/01/world/middleeast/01military.html?hp&ex=1162443600&en=ae294d1d13aed188&ei=5094&partner=homepage
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ICE ACCOMPLISHMENTS IN FISCAL YEAR 2006
http://www.ice.gov/pi/news/factsheets/2006accomplishments.htm
THE GREAT FALCON BASE ATTACK COVER UP
By Allen L Roland
October 27, 2006
http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_allen_l__061027_the_great_falcon_bas.htm
 
America's Leadership Crisis
http://www.thewildernessvoice.net
At College for Deaf, Trustees Drop New Leader
By DIANA JEAN SCHEMO
WASHINGTON, Oct. 29 — Surrendering to months of widening 
and unrelenting protests by students, faculty, alumni and advocates, 
the board of trustees of Gallaudet University, the nation’s premier 
university for the deaf, abandoned its choice of the institution’s 
next president.
October 30, 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/30/education/30gallaudet.html?hp&ex=1162270800&en=0d7f3cfaf655c7e2&ei=5094&partner=homepage
Bush Moves Toward Martial Law
Frank Morales
October 26, 2006
http://www.uruknet.info?p=27769   or
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/10/28/18324231.php
Yahoo! on NSA Surveillance: No Comment 
By Declan McCullagh, CNET News.com
Published on ZDNet News: February 15, 2006, 1:55 PM PT 
Under cross-examination during a congressional hearing, Yahoo's top 
lawyer refused on Wednesday to say whether the company opens 
its records for government surveillance without a court order.
http://justanotherblowback.blogspot.com/2006/10/yahoo-on-nsa-surveillance-no-comment.html 
Fmr. Israeli soldier exposes abuse of Palestinians
This is an interview Democracy Now’s Amy Goodman carried out 
with Yehuda Shaul, a former Israeli soldier, and the co-founder 
of Breaking the Silence, a group comprised of former Israeli 
soldiers who seek exposing human rights abuses by the 
Israeli military.
10/28/2006 7:00:00 PM GMT
http://www.aljazeera.com/me.asp?service_ID=12030
(Justice Department has corrected the number of fugitives 
arrested to 10,773 from 10,733 -- in headline and fourth
paragraph)
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - More than 10,000 fugitives, including 
1,659 alleged sex offenders, were arrested in a week-long sweep 
by law enforcement officials in 24 eastern states, U.S. Attorney
General Alberto Gonzales said on Thursday.
November 2, 2006 
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061102/ts_nm/crime_fugitives_dc
FOCUS | Report Says Iraq Contractor Is Hiding Data From US
A Halliburton subsidiary that has been subjected to numerous 
investigations for billions of dollars of contracts it has received 
for work in Iraq has systematically misused federal rules 
to withhold basic information on its practices from American 
officials, a federal oversight agency said yesterday. Although 
KBR has been subjected to a growing number of specific 
investigations and paid substantial fines, this marks 
the first time the federal government has weighed 
in and accused it of systematically engaging in a practice 
aimed at veiling its business practices in Iraq.
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/102806Z.shtml
