Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, June 03, 2003, Page 3, Image 3

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    Nation & world briefing
Bush says he’s dedicated
to Mideast peace process
Diego Ibarguen
and Jonathan S. Landay
Knight Ridder Newspapers (KRT)
SHARM EL-SHEIK, Egypt —
Heading into two days of talks on
Middle East peace, President
George W. Bush said Monday that
he was prepared to devote whatev
er time was needed to reach a so
lution to the bloody Israel-Pales
tinian conflict.
“The first message js I will dedi
cate the time and energy to move
the process forward. And I think
we’ll make some progress,” Bush
said. “My expectations in the Mid
dle East are to call all the respec
tive parties to their responsibility
to achieve peace. And to make it
very clear that my country and I
will put in as much time as neces
sary to achieve the vision of two
states living side-by-side in peace.”
Bush is to take part Tuesday in a
summit in Sharm el-Sheik with
the leaders of Egypt, Jordan, Sau
di Arabia and Bahrain, and the
new Palestinian prime minister,
Mahmoud Abbas. He then travels
to Aqaba, Jordan, to meet with Ab
bas and Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon.
Observers say the meetings offer
the best hope of movement toward
ending Palestinian-Israeli blood
shed that has claimed more than
3,200 lives, mostly Palestinians,
since September 2000.
“I fully understand this is going
to be a difficult process. I fully un
derstand we need to work with our
friends ... to achieve the process. I
know we won’t make progress un
less people assume their responsi
bilities,” Bush said,
Joining the president in Egypt,
Secretary of State Colin Powell de
scribed “a moment of opportunity
for peace.” The Sharm el Sheik
meeting, he said, “is important to
make sure that the Arab leader
ship is behind and in support of
the road map and the president’s
efforts, and will play their part.”
Powell predicted that Bush would
travel to Aqaba “with the strong
support of the Arab nations.”
The meetings could give the so
called “road map” to Middle East
peace a crucial boost in its early
stages. The plan, drafted by the
United States, the European
Union, the United Nations and
Russia, envisions an independent
Palestinian state by 2005.
Bush’s visit is his first to the
FCC
continued from page 1
overall, we want to be cautious
and see how the financial markets
sort out the rule-making. I don’t
think there will be as many
transactions as opponents of this
rule-making fear.”
Media General Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer J. Stewart
Bryan, whose company already
owns a newspaper and a TV sta
tion in common in six cities, said
the agency’s vote validates his
company’s “convergence” strategy
merging broadcast and print news
gathering. But he criticized the
FCC for leaving intact a ban on
such mergers in the nation’s
smallest markets.
“Local news is expensive to pro
duce, and television stations in mar
kets of all sizes are curtailing or elim
inating local news,” he said. “If the
new rule stands, more local news will
be lost in smaller markets.”
Media General owns 25 newspa
pers in the Southeast and has a 20
percent stake in The Denver Post.
Opponents of the new rules said
they would wage national cam
paigns opposing big media to bring
heat on Congress and to pressure
the FCC to change course. Demo
cratic Commissioner Michael
Copps said the agency “awoke a
sleeping giant.”
He said the FCC received nearly
750,000 comments from the public
on the rules change, with “99.9 per
cent” opposing the changes.
Adelstein urged opponents to
keep fighting.
“This is far from over,” he said.
“Congress may prove more re
sponsive to the citizens who pas
sionately plead for the independ
ence and diversity of their media.”
Democratic Sens. John Kerry of
Massachusetts and John Edwards
of North Carolina, who are both
running for president, faulted the
FCC for relaxing the rules. Many
other Democrats in Congress
joined them, and the issue has
irked some Republicans as well.
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.,
plans to lead a meeting of the Sen
ate Commerce Committee with
the five FCC commissioners on
Wednesday to discuss the media
ownership rules.
But Rep. Billy Tauzin, R-La.,
who heads the House Energy and
Commerce Committee, applaud
ed the FCC for relaxing most of
its rules. He scolded the agency
for tightening its regulation of ra
dio ownership.
The FCC changed its definition
of the local market in a way that
will restrict the number of radio
stations one company can own.
That ruling was a setback for
Clear Channel Communications
Inc. of San Antonio, which owns
more than 1,200 radio stations
across the country.
“Clear Channel is deeply disap
pointed with today’s FCC vote to
re-regulate the radio industry,”
said company president and chief
operating officer Mark Mays.
Market analysts say the new
rules will probably lead newspaper
companies to buy and swap more
TV stations. Analysts’ speculation
has centered on companies like
Gannett Inc., Tribune Co., Media
General Inc. and Dallas-based
Belo Corp., which owns The Dal
las Morning News and three other
daily newspapers, along with 19
television stations.
Congress voted in 1996 to re
quire the FCC to justify its broad
cast ownership rules every two
years. Last year, the U.S. Court of
Appeals in Washington, D.C.,
struck down one rule, sent two
others back to the commission
and said the FCC failed to demon
strate a rationale for the way it
limits broadcast ownership.
Susan Ness, a Democrat who
was on the commission when it
conducted its last review, said the
agency went too far Monday in re
sponding to the courts.
“They used a meat ax instead of
a knife,” she said. “The court
slapped us for gradualism. It does
n’t mean the rules could not
be justified.”
© 2003, The Dallas Morning News.
Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune
Information Services.
please recycle this paper!
Middle East, and represents his
deepest venture into Middle East
peacemaking. If successful, the
meetings could help soften anger
at the United States among Arabs,
who believe that America favors
the Israelis in negotiations.
To reach the road map’s end
goal of a Palestinian state, Israelis
and Palestinians must make a se
ries of increasingly difficult con
cessions, beginning with recipro
cal statements accepting each
other’s right to exist.
In the early stages, Palestinians
must crack down on terrorist
groups and continue reforming the
corruption-ridden Palestinian Au
thority. Israelis must refrain from
violent incursions into Palestinian
territories, freeze the expansion of
Jewish settlements in those terri
tories and dismantle settlements
built since March 2001.
© 2003, Knight Ridder/Tribune
Information Services.
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PHI BETA KAPPA SOCIETY
Alpha of Oregon Chapter • University of Oregon
Alpha of Oregon chapter congratulates the 195 students elected
to membership in the Phi Beta Kappa Society at a meeting held
May 14, 2003. Members-elect who accept the invitation to join
the society will be initiated Saturday, June 14, in the Gerlinger
Hall Alumni Lounge. Phi Beta Kappa is the nation’s oldest, most
prestigious academic honorary society. For minimum require
ments, see <http://www.uoregon.edu/~pbk>.
2003 OREGON SIX
Jenelle Kiara Bray
Marissa Suzanne Gordon
Picard
Oliver Jacob Levine
Erin Lise Machell
Sheerin Niloofar Shahinpoor
Ian Sorensen Sullivan
ADDITIONAL MEMBERS
ELECT
Alyssa Anne Aaby
Caryn Jaclyn Ackerman
Faith Noelle Adams
Sara Marie Adams
Marisa Dawn Agotsch
Nora Sam Ahmed
Haley Lynn Akin
Britta Marie Ameel
Nicholas Sean Anderson
Lauren Elizabeth Armstr ong
Elizabeth Rose Asai
Anne Paige Austin
Kimberly Anne Babcock
Jessica Marie Bailey
Joseph Kelly Barker
John Patrick Baur
Lindsay Laurel Beckman
Marisa Ann Youngblood
Behrends
Alan Berg
Janna Marie Bergquist
Meghan Marie Besonen
Amoreena Jean Bessey-Treff
Amber Dawn Bieg
Kevin Patrick Blaine
Robert K. Bliss
Shannon Wachter Boettcher
Stephanie Carole Bohn
Windy Renee Borman
Carrie Louise Boulton
Adam Maluhia Bourret
Nora Kathleen Bower
Tambi Caprice Boyle
Brandy Colleen Brockman
Ashley Elizabeth Brown
Rachel Renata Bryan
Stacy Clare Carleton
Che Chen
Angela Lyn Cherbas
Helen Hoi Yeng Cheung
Joseph Leo Cichosz
Anna Paula Freedom
Ciesielski
Jonathan Allen Clements
Elizabeth F. Cohen
Katherine Ann Collins
Sarah Holmes Countryman
Nicholas Thomas Crozier
Paul J. Csonka
Karen Anne Curry
Kristen Dawn Davis
Ryan Richard Davis
Marissa Lynne Dean
Andrea K. Decker
Lisa Elaine Delgado
David Benjamin Depper
Morgan McKenzie Dethman
Sydney Erin Edlund-Jermain
Siavash Eftekhari
Shauna Tamar Eisenberg
Meghan T Farnsworth
Carina May Febus
Erin Amanda Fender
Alexis Edward Ferguson
Abbey Danielle Fief
Abigail Fillmore
Ann B. Fillmore
Kristi Lynn Fletcher
Kelly Ann Freimuth
Amy Wilds Fuller
Leslie D’Anne Gage
Miria Fay Ginnis
Heather Nicole Goodwin
Erinn Tessa Gulbrandsen
Katherine Anne Haines
David Jonathan Haines
Hanna Leah Hall
Patricia Jean Hammond
Sara Marie Henley
Robyn Lynn Hilles
Meredith Ann Holley
Katie Lynn Howard
Diane Michelle Huber
Sarah Wisdom Hurd
Akiko Ikkai
Rachel Lauren Jacks
Ryan Michael James
Katie Lynne Jiries
Leona Rebecca Kassel
Mark Aaron Keck
Jennifer Ann Keller
Michael Butler Kelly
Susan Youn Kim
Michael Jason Kleckner
Alanna Jade Kovar
Maxim Sergeevich Krivokon
Mary-Esther La Pointe
Anne Louise Clark
Lagozzino
Melanie Langlois
Mary Elizabeth Larson
Wendy Lee
Craig Alan Leonard
Tyler Dean Linscott
Santiago Lorenzo
Rachael Brooke Maddock
Hughes
Margaret Ellen Maffai
Melissa Marie Magaro
Nicole Marie Maggiulli
Katherine Elizabeth
Markowitz
Katie Ann Mason
Kayoko Matsui
Yasumi Matsumoto
Daniel Jack Matthews
Ruth Irene Me Devitt
Shelly Christina Me Grath
Michelle Leigh Me Laughlin
Claire Thomas Mecredy
Alejandro Mejia
Laura Dian Melling
Crystal Maye Middlestadt
Wendy Suzanne Miller
Jennifer Louise Miner
John Michael Mize
Rosalba Montes
Tova Rachel Moore
Catherine Jean Morris
Christine Elizabeth
Mosbaugh
Michael Ryan Mullins
Heather Marie Murtaugh
Amanda Lee Orand
Matthew Macleod Orbell
Gina Marie Ostby
Katarzyna Ewa Patora
David Jay Paulsen
Michael Christian Peterson
Eleanor Danielle Pierce
Kristin Anne Rasmussen
Karman Marie Ratliff
Caralyne Bryanne Ray
Jarod Thomas Rhoades
Jenny Michelle Riker
Elizabeth Anne Rogers
Kathryn Louise Rose
Sarah Gene Rump
Craig Morrison Russell
Michelle Lynne Sabbato
Michelle Elaine Schmidt
Natalie Schraner
Erica James Schwartz
Gregory David Scott
Rose Leen Scrutton
Kenneth Logan Searl
Emily Lynne Seymore
Caitlin Elizabeth Shelman
Ko Chi Shum
Hope Lindsey Siler
Lynnelle Kimberly Smith
Elizabeth Anne Smith
Douglas Damond Snow
Brynne Christine Stanton
Sara Elizabeth Stebner
Taylor Cass Stevenson
Amanda Nichole Stiver
Heidi Lynn Swanson
Kevin James Taylor
Koya Teradaira
Kimberly Ann Thompson
Matthew James Thornton
Greg Allen Toates
Kenichi Tomita
Steffany Jill Townsend-Rault
Joseph Scott Travis
Nicholas Dale Trebon
Jennie Christine Trow
Gregory Alan Van Gordon
Tyler Justin Vick
Sarah Grace Volkov
Lauren Eloise Walchli
Jennifer Patricia Walker
Sara Jean Walker
Joshua Kirk Walterscheid
Julie Anne Ward
David Alden Weaver
Sarah Beth Weiner
Evan Douglas White
Sarah Beth White
Jonathan Patrick Wiebe
Nathan Daniel Wilson
Greta Anne Wrolstad
Megan Johanna Young
Ying Zhu