THE JERUSALEM POST
Orthodox Jews have burned hundreds of New Testaments in the latest act
of violence against Christian missionaries in Israel.
Uzi Aharon, the deputy mayor of the central Israeli town of Or Yehuda,
says he got into a loudspeaker car last Thursday and urged people to
turn over hundreds of New Testaments and missionary material recently
distributed by missionaries.
The books were dumped into a pile and religious students set them afire
in a lot near a synagogue, he said.
The Maariv newspaper reported Tuesday that hundreds of students took
part in the book-burning.
But Aharon told The AP on Tuesday that only a few students were present
and he was not there when the books were torched. Hundreds of New
Testaments were burned, he said.
Original
Source
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Tuesday, May 20
by
Publisher
on Tue 20 May 2008 12:07 PM CDT
by
Publisher
on Tue 20 May 2008 09:04 AM AKDT
By Betsy Pisik - NEW YORK — A U.N. expert on racism and xenophobia
arrived in Washington yesterday for a three-week fact-finding visit to
examine human rights lapses in the United States.
It is the second time in recent weeks that international attention has focused on the U.S. record on human rights. Earlier this month, the advocacy group Freedom House released an evaluation critical of the U.S. record on access to health care, education and equal justice for minorities and immigrants. U.S. officials publicly are taking the high road on the visit of U.N. rapporteur Doudou Diene of Senegal. "I think it's important for the [U.N.] Human Rights Council to spend its time on real problems and the problems of violations of human rights of countries that are notorious violators," said Zalmay Khalilzad, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, offering a list of suggestions. "But we welcome the visit." Mr. Diene's U.S. tour coincides with the General Assembly's annual elections of new members to the Geneva-based Human Rights Council. Several countries with less-than-stellar human rights records are in the running for the vote tomorrow. The rapporteur plans to visit New York, Chicago, Omaha, Neb., Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 20 May 2008 09:01 AM AKDT
White House denies Iran attack report
JPost.com Staff The White House on Tuesday flatly denied an Army Radio report that claimed US President George W. Bush intends to attack Iran before the end of his term. It said that while the military option had not been taken off the table, the Administration preferred to resolve concerns about Iran's push for a nuclear weapon "through peaceful diplomatic means." Army Radio had quoted a top official in Jerusalem claiming that a senior member in the entourage of President Bush, who concluded a trip to Israel last week, had said in a closed meeting here that Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney were of the opinion that military action against Iran was called for. The official reportedly went on to say that "the hesitancy of Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice" was preventing the administration from deciding to launch such an attack on the Islamic Republic for the time being. The Army Radio report, which was quoted by The Jerusalem Post and resonated widely, stated that according to assessments in Israel, the recent turmoil in Lebanon, where Hizbullah has de facto established control of the country, was advancing an ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 20 May 2008 08:53 AM AKDT
Iran's disputed nuclear program has sent a wave of interest in atomic
energy across the Middle East, a think tank said Tuesday, warning that
it risked setting the scene for a regional nuclear arms race.
At least 13 Middle Eastern countries either announced new plans to explore atomic energy or revived pre-existing nuclear programs between February 2006 and January 2007, the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies, or IISS, said in a report. While the flurry of interest in nuclear power is still tentative, the report said countries such as Saudi Arabia, Algeria or Egypt could soon feel the need to match Iran's nuclear ambitions. "If Tehran's nuclear program is unchecked, there is reason for concern that it could in time prompt a regional cascade of proliferation among Iran's neighbors," it said. Israel, the United States and others have accused the Islamic republic of covertly seeking nuclear weapons under the guise of a civilian nuclear program. Iran insists its intentions are peaceful, but its program has helped push nearly all its Middle Eastern neighbors into drawing up their own nuclear plans. The report cautioned that most of the programs were still immature — it noted that sustainable new reactor projects ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 20 May 2008 07:56 AM AKDT
Herb Keinon
A nuclear Iran is as much "a nightmare" for Russia as it is for the US and Israel, and Moscow doesn't differ with Washington and Jerusalem on the need to stop Teheran, only on the way to do it, Russian Ambassador to Israel Petr Stegniy said Monday. According to Stegniy, who has served extensively in the Arab world, including as the then-Soviet Union's charge d'affaires in Libya from 1986-1990, during the height of US-Libyan tension, it is counterproductive to push Iran, or similar regimes - such as that of Muammar Gaddafi in the 1980s - into a corner. Stegniy's comments came during a lecture he gave on Russian foreign policy at Hebrew University's Harry S. Truman Research Institute for the Advancement of Peace. Stegniy remembers talks he had with the Americans while he was posted in Tripoli - a period that witnessed the bombing of a disco in West Berlin that prompted US air raids on Libya, and the Lockerbie bombing - and shared advice with the US at the time about how to get Libya to change its behavior. The best advice, he said, was to "get Gaddafi's name off the front pages, leave him alone with ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 20 May 2008 07:40 AM AKDT
By Charles Abbott
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. food prices will rise by 5 percent this year, the largest increase since 1990 and propelled by sharply higher prices for bread, cookies and other bakery products, the Agriculture Department said on Monday. It would be the second year in a row of high food-price inflation, with another year or two of large increases expected. Until 2007, food prices tended to rise more slowly than the overall U.S. inflation rate. "This year, we expect food prices to increase about 5 percent," Joe Glauber, USDA chief economist, told reporters. At the start of the year, USDA foresaw a 3.5 percent rise. Prices of cereals and bakery products are forecast to zoom by 8 percent this year, up 2 percentage points from USDA's initial forecast. "That's what happens when wheat prices double in six months," said Ephraim Leibtag, the USDA economist who tracks food prices. Sharp increases are forecast for eggs and for fats and oils this year. Cereals and bakery goods account for a larger share of food spending than do eggs and fats and oils. Americans spend more than $1 trillion a year on groceries, snacks, carry-out food and meals at restaurants. Farmers ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 20 May 2008 07:27 AM AKDT
By CALVIN WOODWARD and CHRISTINE SIMMONS, Associated Press Writers
They were a sailor, a bookkeeper and a factory worker, men of humble roots and distant times whose kin would run for president in 2008. Although they are long gone, these three are heard about on occasion through the voices of their descendants — John McCain, Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton. Now there's another way to get to know them. Under an agreement being announced Tuesday, a vast range of records held by the National Archives will become more easily available online, offering information on some 100 million ancestors. McCain talks in the campaign about granddad "Slew," the brilliant, foul-mouthed seaman. Obama speaks of the "straight-backed" Methodist ways of his great-grandfather, Rolla Payne of Kansas. Clinton talks about the times of Hugh Simpson Rodham, the grandfather who labored in a Scranton, Pa., lace factory, back when that was enough for a stable life The ancestors are anecdotes these days. Once they were making their own way. The documents provide a snapshot of who these men were. Among the papers: a 1910 census statement showing John Sidney McCain serving as an ensign aboard the USS Washington; a 1917 draft registration card ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 20 May 2008 07:19 AM AKDT
A lobby for homosexuals and transgenders in Maine has announced plans
to shadow individuals who will be working to collect signatures on the
"YES for Marriage and Equality" pro-family referendum, which is
intended to put a marriage protection plan on the 2009 election ballot.
In a report in the New England Blade this week, Betsy Smith, executive director of the Equality Maine activist organization, outlined "a plan that asks volunteers to stand with the people the [Christian Civic] League recruits to collect signatures for the petition." "I think it is disgusting that so-called 'gay' groups plan on harassing dear Christian grandmothers who simply want to gather signatures on Primary Election Day. Shame on Equality Maine," said Michael Heath, chief of the CCL. "They need to call off this totalitarian campaign of intimidation and apologize. Yesterday wouldn't be soon enough," he said in a statement today. The Equality report said, "this way … signers will not misinterpret the petition's purpose and understand before they sign that the so-caled (sic) 'equality' the League wants is really equality for straight couples, not equality for all." A report from CCL said, "Smith went on to state the Equality Maine petition blockers 'will offer a ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 20 May 2008 07:17 AM AKDT
'Mr. Gore's movie has claims no informed expert endorses'
By Bob Unruh More than 31,000 scientists across the U.S. – including more than 9,000 Ph.D.s in fields such as atmospheric science, climatology, Earth science, environment and dozens of other specialties – have signed a petition rejecting "global warming," the assumption that the human production of greenhouse gases is damaging Earth's climate. "There is no convincing scientific evidence that human release of carbon dioxide, methane, or other greenhouse gases is causing or will, in the foreseeable future, cause catastrophic heating of the Earth's atmosphere and disruption of the Earth's climate," the petition states. "Moreover, there is substantial scientific evidence that increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide produce many beneficial effects upon the natural plant and animal environments of the Earth." The Petition Project actually was launched nearly 10 years ago, when the first few thousand signatures were assembled. Then, between 1999 and 2007, the list of signatures grew gradually without any special effort or campaign. But now, a new effort has been conducted because of an "escalation of the claims of 'consensus,' release of the movie 'An Inconvenient Truth' by Mr. Al Gore, and related events," according to officials with the project.... more » |
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