NATION/WORLD Thursday, August 6, 2015 East Oregonian Page 7A BRIEFLY Obama: Critics of Iran nuclear deal ‘selling a fantasy’ AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi Member of a rightist group offer silent prayers for the victims of the atomic bombing with anti-U.S. banners near the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo, Thursday. Japan marked the 70th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima on Thursday. A banner, left, reads “ Is U.S. righteous? human rights? Don’t make a fool of victims!” Japan marks 70th anniversary of Hiroshima atomic bombing Associated Press +,526+,0$ -DSDQ ² -DSDQ marked the 70th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima on Thursday, with Mayor Kazumi Matsui renewing calls for U.S. President Barack Obama and other world leaders to step up efforts toward making a nuclear weapons free world. Tens of thousands of attendants stood for a minute of silence at 8:30 a.m. at the ceremony in Hiroshima’s peace park near the epicenter of the 1945 attack, marking the moment of the atomic blast. Then dozens of doves were released as a symbol of peace. 7KH 86 ERPE ³/LWWOH %R\´ WKH ¿UVW RQH XVHG DW ZDU NLOOHG SHRSOHDQGDVHFRQGERPE³)DW0DQ´ dropped over Nagasaki three days later, killed another 70,000, prompting Japan’s VXUUHQGHULQ:RUOG:DU,, Matsui called the nuclear weapons “the ultimate inhumanity and the abso- OXWH HYLO´ WKDW PXVW EH DEROLVKHG DQG criticized nuclear powers for keeping them as threats to achieve their national interests. He said the world still bristles with more than 15,000 nuclear weapons. He renewed an invitation to Obama and other world leaders to visit Hiroshima and Nagasaki to see the scars themselves. “President Obama and other policy- makers, please come to the A-bombed FLWLHV KHDU WKH KLEDNXVKD VXUYLYRUV with your own ears, and encounter the UHDOLW\RIWKHDWRPLFERPELQJV´KHVDLG “Surely, you will be impelled to start discussing a legal framework, including DQXFOHDUZHDSRQVFRQYHQWLRQ´ The anniversary comes as Japan is divided over Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s push to pass unpopular legislation to expand the country’s military role internationally, a year after his Cabinet’s decision to loosen Japan’s war-re- nouncing constitution by adopting a new interpretation of it. “We must establish a broad national security framework that does not rely on XVHRIIRUFHEXWLVEDVHGRQWUXVW´0DWVXL said. He urged the Japanese government WRVWLFNZLWK³WKHSDFL¿VPRIWKH-DSDQHVH &RQVWLWXWLRQ´WROHDGWKHJOREDOHIIRUWRI no proliferation. Abe said that as the sole country to face a nuclear attack, Japan had a duty to push for the elimination of nuclear weapons. He pledged to promote the cause through international conferences to be held in Hiroshima later this month. With the average age of survivors now H[FHHGLQJ\HDUVIRUWKH¿UVWWLPHWKLV year, passing on their stories is consid- ered an urgent task. There were 5,359 ³KLEDNXVKD´RUVXUYLYRUVZKRGLHGRYHU the past year, bringing the total death toll from the Hiroshima bombing to 297,684. The anniversary comes as Japan is divided over Abe’s push to pass unpop- ular legislation to expand the country’s military role internationally. The sea of people who attended the ceremony this year also included U.S. Ambassador Caroline Kennedy and representatives from more than 100 countries, including Britain, France and Russia. ³/LWWOH%R\´GURSSHGIURPWKH(QROD Gay, a B-29 bomber, destroyed 90 percent of the city and killed an estimated 140,000 people, including those who succumbed to injuries and radiation sickness in the ensuing weeks. Candidate who didn’t even vote wins Mississippi Democratic nomination By EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS Associated Press JACKSON, Miss. — The 46-year-old truck driver who won the Democratic nomina- tion for Mississippi governor says he spent nothing on his campaign and knows nobody in politics. He didn’t even vote in the primary because he says he was busy. Robert Gray can’t explain how he defeated the trial lawyer who was the favored candidate of the party establishment in Tuesday’s primary. Gray, who has lived in the Jackson area most of his life, visited the state Capitol on Wednesday for what he said ZDV WKH ¿UVW WLPH ² DQG LW was at the request of reporters trying to answer the biggest question in this Republi- can-dominated state: Who the heck is this guy? “Everybody’s been trying WR¿JXUHRXWZKR,DP,JXHVV ,¶PDTXLHWSHUVRQE\QDWXUH´ said Gray, who uses the &% KDQGOH ³6LOHQW .QLJKW´ because, well, he’s not exactly chatty. Democrats controlled Mississippi politics for decades, but they’ve been steamrolled in most gover- nor’s races for a generation. Now, many longtime Demo- crats worry that Gray will simply be the next hapless victim of a well-funded Republican machine. “Does anybody know or has anybody ever seen Democratic gubernatorial QRPLQHH 5REHUW *UD\"´ Marty Wiseman, a Demo- cratic-leaning retired political scientist, said on Facebook. Wiseman questioned how someone who made few appearances could carry most counties and win a three- person primary without a runoff: “Something ain’t right DERXWDOOWKLV´ Gray has driven a big rig since the early 1990s and said KHLVPDNLQJKLV¿UVWUXQIRU AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis :$6+,1*721$3 — President Barack Obama DVVDLOHGFULWLFVRIKLV,UDQ nuclear deal Wednesday as ³VHOOLQJDIDQWDV\´WRWKH American people, warning Congress that blocking the accord would damage the nation’s credibility and increase the likelihood of more war in the Middle East. Besides challenging opponents at home, Obama FDVW,VUDHOL3ULPH0LQLVWHU Benjamin Netanyahu as an isolated international opponent of the historic DFFRUGVD\LQJ³,GRQRW GRXEWKLVVLQFHULW\EXW, EHOLHYHKHLVZURQJ´ The agreement would UHTXLUH,UDQWRGLVPDQWOH most of its nuclear program for at least a decade in exchange for billions of dollars in relief from international sanctions. But Netanyahu and some critics in the U.S. argue that LWZRXOGQRWVWRS,UDQIURP building a bomb. The president’s blunt remarks, in an hour-long address at American University, were part of an intense lobbying campaign by the White House ahead of Congress’ vote next month to either approve or disapprove the international agreement. Opponents of the agreement have streamed to Capitol Hill, too, to make their case, and they have spent tens of millions of dollars on advertisements. The stakes are high, Obama said, contending WKDWLWLVQ¶WMXVW,UDQ¶VDELOLW\ to build a bomb that is on the line but also “America’s credibility as the anchor of WKHLQWHUQDWLRQDOV\VWHP´ Obama’s diplomatic RYHUWXUHVWR,UDQD centerpiece of his foreign policy agenda, have put him at odds with Republicans and some Democrats, as well as with Netanyahu, who has campaigned vigorously against the deal. Netanyahu and U.S. FULWLFVRIWKH,UDQGHDOVD\ Obama is presenting a false choice between accepting the deal at hand and going WRZDUWRVWRS,UDQIURP building a bomb. Half of blacks say police have treated them unfairly :$6+,1*721$3 — A majority of blacks in the United States — more than 3 out of 5 — say they or a family member have personal experience with being treated unfairly by the police, and their race is the reason. Half of African- American respondents, including 6 in 10 black men, said they personally had been treated unfairly by police because of their race, compared with 3 percent of whites. Another 15 percent said they knew of a family member who had been treated unfairly by the police because of their race. This information, from a survey conducted by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, comes as the Michael Brown shooting in Ferguson, Missouri, DSSURDFKHVLWV¿UVW anniversary and the nation continues to grapple with police-related deaths of black Americans. White Americans who live in more diverse communities — where census data show at least 25 percent of the population is non-white — were more likely than other whites to say police in their communities mistreat minorities, 58 percent to 42 percent. And they’re more likely to see the police as too quick to use deadly force, 42 percent to 29 percent. Larry Washington, 30, RI0HUULOOYLOOH,QGLDQD described his encounter ZLWKDZKLWHSROLFHRI¿FHU when he was arrested for WKHIWLQ%XUEDQN,OOLQRLVDV DWHHQDJHU³:KHQ,JRWWR WKHSROLFHVWDWLRQWKHRI¿FHU who arrested me told me WKDW,ORRNHGOLNH,ZDQWHG WRGRVRPHWKLQJDERXWLW´ Washington said, adding, “And he kept calling me µQLJJHU¶´ ³,W¶VEHHQOLNHWKLVIRU DORQJWLPH´:DVKLQJWRQ VDLG³,W¶VMXVWQRZWKDW everybody starting to record it and stuff, it’s just hitting the spotlight. Most Caucasians, they think it’s just starting to go on when LW¶VEHHQOLNHWKLV´ Debris found on island is from Flight 370 KUALA LUMPUR, 0DOD\VLD$3²$ piece of a wing found washed up on Reunion ,VODQGODVWZHHNLVIURP Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 that vanished last year, Malaysia’s prime minister announced Thursday, saying he hoped the news ends the ³XQVSHDNDEOH´XQFHUWDLQW\ of the passengers’ families. Yet authorities in France, the U.S. and Australia were more cautious, stopping VKRUWRIIXOOFRQ¿UPDWLRQ Some relatives said the mixed messages were causing them yet more confusion and anxiety. The disappearance of the Boeing 777 jetliner 515 GD\VDJRZKLOHRQDÀLJKW from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014, has been one of the biggest mysteries in aviation history. 2I¿FLDOVEHOLHYHGLWFUDVKHG LQWKHVRXWKHUQ,QGLDQ Ocean, killing all 239 people aboard, but it is unknown why the plane went down. U.S. and French RI¿FLDOVLQYROYHGLQWKH investigation were more cautious, stopping short of IXOOFRQ¿UPDWLRQEXWVD\LQJ it made sense that the metal piece of the wing, known DVWKHÀDSHURQFDPHIURP Flight 370. The Australian government, which leads the seabed search for wreckage west of Australia, was also less certain than Malaysia, saying in a statement that “based on high probability, it is MH370. Robert Gray of Jackson, who won the Democratic primary for governor over two candidates, is interviewed in the hallway of the state Capitol in Jackson, Miss., Wednesday. RI¿FH EHFDXVH 5HSXEOLFDQ Gov. Phil Bryant is failing to help improve life in a state where poverty is a persistent problem. Gray said he wants to expand Medicaid and spend more on schools and high- ways. He has never worked on legislation, but he listens to a lot of public radio while he’s driving, and he uses the word ³LQIUDVWUXFWXUH´DVFDVXDOO\DV any policy wonk. %U\DQWKDVKHOGRI¿FH for about 25 years, a little longer than Gray has been hauling freight. Bryant moved up from state representative to auditor to lieutenant governor and then to governor. Gray said he’s not daunted by Bryant’s $2.8 million FDPSDLJQ IXQG ³, KRSH KH spends it, because, believe it or not, that helps the HFRQRP\´ Other low-budget candi- dates have won Democratic nominations in the conserva- WLYH6RXWKLQUHFHQW\HDUV,Q 2014 in Tennessee, Democrat Charlie Brown, who had no campaign organization, lost the governor’s race by a wide margin to Republican incum- EHQW%LOO+DVODP,QLQ South Carolina, unemployed Army veteran Alvin Greene won the Democratic primary for a U.S. Senate seat with few public appearances and no campaign cash; he lost the general election to Republican Sen. Jim DeMint. Mississippi Democratic chairman Rickey Cole met privately with Gray on Wednesday at the party head- quarters, and said he believes that the nominee will appeal to voters who are sick of slick politicians. “He brings to the race an authenticity that’s totally XQVFULSWHG´&ROHVDLG Everything 50% OFF Friday, August 7 Saturday, August 8 1915 Washington St. • Baker City 541-523-3288 www.merlenormanstudio.com/mn-9053 © 2015 Merle Norman Cosmetics, Inc. M E R L E N O R M A N . C O M The Salvation Army Thrift Store 1805 SW Court PL Pendleton, OR 541-276-3301