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Join the Columbus MeetUp for Presidential candidate and former Vermont Governor, and physician Howard Dean. Meetings are the first Wednesday of the month. Go to http://dean2004.meetup.com/ to join the 100-plus local activists working to win the nomination for Dean.  Learn more about Dean by visiting www.deanforamerica.com. Rally for Dean when he visits Columbus in May! For immediate info on local action contact: Steve Chaffin (lawbug@direcway.com). Dean in his own words: “What in the world are so many Democrats doing supporting the President’s unilateral intervention in Iraq?” “I’m tired of listening the fundamentalist preachers!” and “I want my country back!”
Your unwanted but still useful items can help us help Central Ohio's homeless animals...

What is it?
No More Homeless Pets: Central Ohio has secured a prime space for selling your donated goods at German Village's Village Valuables. All proceeds benefit NMHP: Central Ohio.

VILLAGE VALUABLES
Event Date: Saturday, May 17
Event Hours: 8:00 am - 4 pm
The City's Largest Yard Sale! You will donate your unwanted goods to us and we will sell them at Village Valuables in conjunction with our animal adoption event. All proceeds will benefit NMHP: Central Ohio.

How can I help?
You can help in many ways:
1. Tell all your friends and family about this event and encourage them to donate any unwanted, but still useful goods to NMHP: Central Ohio -- instructions for drop-off below.
2. Scour your cupboards, clean out the garage and see what you can find to donate.

What next?
Drop off boxes of donations to Heather at 247 Lear Street in the German Village. Take Third Street south toward German Village, turn left on
The Ohio State University continues in its efforts to separate the public's views of animals it uses for research into the "lower" and "higher" animals, the "higher" animals being primates, dogs, cats, and rabbits; the "lower" animals being rats and mice.

OSU distributed a press release April 3, 2003, which stated , "The university is constantly working to reduce the number of animals required to conduct its research projects and uses alternative approaches to animal use when and where they are feasible"

Not true. In 1989, OSU used 36,432 animals. In 2002, the number of animals used has increased to 77,056. Since 1999, the numbers of rats and mice used for research has more than doubled going from 31,014 in 1999 to 71,960 in 2002. Rats and mice are also more likely to fall into the category of "E" experiments. "E" category experiments are those where the animal can experience pain or distress that is NOT relieved. Because the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) does not recognize rats and mice as animals, their numbers are not reported to USDA and a justification for such animals in an "E" category does not have to be reviewed by USDA.
Two weeks ago, after the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission issued a staff report to Congress that said California’s electricity and natural gas markets were the victim of widespread manipulation by more than a dozen energy companies, the chairman of FERC and one of the agency’s commissioners took the unusual step of holding a private conference call with Wall Street analysts to calm jittery investors who feared the report would send energy company stocks plummeting.   

One of the items that came up for discussion during the conference call was whether FERC would decide if California’s $20 billion in long-term electricity contracts should be abrogated because, according to California state officials, the deals were signed during the height of the energy crisis when manipulation in the state was rampant.   

FERC Commissioner Nora Brownell indicated during the public meeting hours earlier that she would likely not support California’s argument that the contracts be voided because it would scare away investors or discourage companies from signing similar deals in the future.   

Baghdad's hospitals admit a hundred casualties an hour and have run out of anesthetics. Surgeons try to numb up mangled children with short-term pain-killers, but even these are in dwindling supply. Iraqi families who fled into the desert face 100-degree temperatures and no water. U.S. tanks inflict mayhem and slaughter in Baghdad's streets.

From Umm Qasr and the Faw peninsula, through Basra to Baghdad, it's a scene of devastation, with every bridge and guard post adorned with civilian cars riddled with bullets by jumpy U.S. soldiers. There's no "fog of war" where the disaster of daily life in Iraq (what's now swaddled in that virtuous bureaucratic phrase "humanitarian crisis") is concerned. Reports confirm what all sane forecasts predicted of a U.S. attack: It is a catastrophe for the Iraqi people, particularly the poor.

AUSTIN, Texas -- Oh good. It looks as though we're going to have as big a fight over postwar plans for Iraq as we did over the war itself. Just what we need, more of everybody being at everybody else's throat.

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who seems prepared to run the world, favors one Ahmed Chalabi of the Iraqi National Congress, an exile-emigre group, as postwar leader (read figurehead-puppet). Chalabi is bitterly opposed by both the State Department and the CIA.

According to Knight-Ridder's Jonathan Landay, American military planes flew Chalabi and 700 troops, the newly named "First Battalion of Free Iraqi Forces," into Nasiriyah Sunday to be integrated into Gen. Tommy Franks command. Landay reports, "Senior administration officials said that Chalabi had had difficulty recruiting enough forces to go into southern Iraq and may have tapped the discredited Badr Brigade, an Iranian-backed Shiite Muslim group, to get his 700 soldiers." Think how happy the Iraqis will be to see some detachment from their old enemy Iran.

Landay also reports, "It was information provided by Chalabi
Victims of the Anglo-American Aggression in Iraq [photos]
http://www.robert-fisk.com/iraqwarvictims_mar2003.htm

The Horror And Reality Of Operation Iraqi Freedom [photos]
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article2604.htm

Red Cross horrified by number of dead civilians
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/1049413227648_10/?hu...

Red Cross: Iraq Wounded Too High to Count
http://www.abcnews.go.com/wire/World/ap20030406_446.html
http://truthout.org/docs_03/040803C.shtml

Hospitals buckle as casualties escalate
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/04/06/1049567564883.html

Baghdad Hospitals Stretched to their Limits
Tickertape parades streaming with anger and sorrow
The gross and global injustice and always the lies, damn lies…

To write a poem is to indulge myself --
My pain my sorrow? -- it's just not right.

A man in Iraq becomes hysterical,
His three babies lie in tattered rags,
Their small bodies fit into one crude coffin.

A beatiful teenage girl lies battered, shocked and aching with pain.
One eye gouged with shrapnel, her entire family dead

In Palestine, a preganant woman is crushed when bulldozers
knock down the walls
Her husband hears her calling for help, but he can't pull her out
There's no phone, no ambulance
Her little daughter curls up next to her and cries
Then husband and daughter watch her die….

A sensitive and loving girl vows to help
To stop the bulldozing of houses.
Her friends are watching Britney videos while she flies
around the world
To stop the bulldozing of houses

She calls out to the driver. "I'm standing here as an observer
I beg you, for the love of God, to stop. No one here is hurting you,

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