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January 31, 2005

One lucky dude

ASKAN, Iraq (AP) -- The first time Lance Cpl. Tony Stevens was bombed in Iraq, a car packed with 155 mm shells exploded next to his Humvee just as a device containing five more shells detonated beneath it.

By bomb No. 9, the former baseball minor league shortstop had become a good luck-bad luck icon and the awe of his 1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment patrolling the so-called "triangle of death" south of Baghdad.

With a couple of weeks remaining in his second tour of duty in Iraq, the 26-year-old might be counting the days a little more closely than most and has become a seasoned, battle-hardened veteran of the laws of physics.

"When you hear the explosion, that's actually good," Stevens said, pointing out that because sound travels relatively slowly, hearing the blast means you have survived it. "It means you're still in the game."

One lucky dude

ASKAN, Iraq (AP) -- The first time Lance Cpl. Tony Stevens was bombed in Iraq, a car packed with 155 mm shells exploded next to his Humvee just as a device containing five more shells detonated beneath it.

By bomb No. 9, the former baseball minor league shortstop had become a good luck-bad luck icon and the awe of his 1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment patrolling the so-called "triangle of death" south of Baghdad.

With a couple of weeks remaining in his second tour of duty in Iraq, the 26-year-old might be counting the days a little more closely than most and has become a seasoned, battle-hardened veteran of the laws of physics.

"When you hear the explosion, that's actually good," Stevens said, pointing out that because sound travels relatively slowly, hearing the blast means you have survived it. "It means you're still in the game."

One lucky dude

ASKAN, Iraq (AP) -- The first time Lance Cpl. Tony Stevens was bombed in Iraq, a car packed with 155 mm shells exploded next to his Humvee just as a device containing five more shells detonated beneath it.

By bomb No. 9, the former baseball minor league shortstop had become a good luck-bad luck icon and the awe of his 1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment patrolling the so-called "triangle of death" south of Baghdad.

With a couple of weeks remaining in his second tour of duty in Iraq, the 26-year-old might be counting the days a little more closely than most and has become a seasoned, battle-hardened veteran of the laws of physics.

"When you hear the explosion, that's actually good," Stevens said, pointing out that because sound travels relatively slowly, hearing the blast means you have survived it. "It means you're still in the game."

Breast for sale

Hi there. Like myself, and many others across the world, you've probably noticed a man on eBay is renting his forehead for 30 days, so you can put your logo on it. Well, now, you can do so in the UK. No longer restricted to USA based advertising, you can now rent my CLEAVAGE for a period of 15 days, during which I will display your company logo, slogan or web-site address in the form of a temporary tattoo you will supply to me. I should probably give you some information on the whereabouts of this living billboard. I currently live in the town of Greenock in west of Scotland. I'm often to be found in Glasgow or Edinburgh as well. I'm a 27 year old auburn-haired lass. I'm an ample size 42GG, and I usually wear low-cut tops. I am renting the top part of my cleavage (the part which is legal to display) for you to put your company's logo upon. During the 15 days, I can have photos taken of me, with your logo, in front of any of the popular landmarks in Glasgow, or our nation's capital. The other auction, based in the US, has generated massive media interest around the world, and this auction will likely also generate such attention from UK media. Imagine the possibilities of getting your company logo displayed, FOR FREE on national media. All I ask in return is that you supply the temporary tattoo, and that your logo be no larger than 9 inches wide, and 5 inches tall. Also, I cannot advertise any sectarian, or racial logos, slogans or URL's which point to such sites. Also, if the content is of an 'adult' nature, it must be censored to ensure that it is legal to display in a public area.

Breast for sale

Hi there. Like myself, and many others across the world, you've probably noticed a man on eBay is renting his forehead for 30 days, so you can put your logo on it. Well, now, you can do so in the UK. No longer restricted to USA based advertising, you can now rent my CLEAVAGE for a period of 15 days, during which I will display your company logo, slogan or web-site address in the form of a temporary tattoo you will supply to me. I should probably give you some information on the whereabouts of this living billboard. I currently live in the town of Greenock in west of Scotland. I'm often to be found in Glasgow or Edinburgh as well. I'm a 27 year old auburn-haired lass. I'm an ample size 42GG, and I usually wear low-cut tops. I am renting the top part of my cleavage (the part which is legal to display) for you to put your company's logo upon. During the 15 days, I can have photos taken of me, with your logo, in front of any of the popular landmarks in Glasgow, or our nation's capital. The other auction, based in the US, has generated massive media interest around the world, and this auction will likely also generate such attention from UK media. Imagine the possibilities of getting your company logo displayed, FOR FREE on national media. All I ask in return is that you supply the temporary tattoo, and that your logo be no larger than 9 inches wide, and 5 inches tall. Also, I cannot advertise any sectarian, or racial logos, slogans or URL's which point to such sites. Also, if the content is of an 'adult' nature, it must be censored to ensure that it is legal to display in a public area.

Breast for sale

Hi there. Like myself, and many others across the world, you've probably noticed a man on eBay is renting his forehead for 30 days, so you can put your logo on it. Well, now, you can do so in the UK. No longer restricted to USA based advertising, you can now rent my CLEAVAGE for a period of 15 days, during which I will display your company logo, slogan or web-site address in the form of a temporary tattoo you will supply to me. I should probably give you some information on the whereabouts of this living billboard. I currently live in the town of Greenock in west of Scotland. I'm often to be found in Glasgow or Edinburgh as well. I'm a 27 year old auburn-haired lass. I'm an ample size 42GG, and I usually wear low-cut tops. I am renting the top part of my cleavage (the part which is legal to display) for you to put your company's logo upon. During the 15 days, I can have photos taken of me, with your logo, in front of any of the popular landmarks in Glasgow, or our nation's capital. The other auction, based in the US, has generated massive media interest around the world, and this auction will likely also generate such attention from UK media. Imagine the possibilities of getting your company logo displayed, FOR FREE on national media. All I ask in return is that you supply the temporary tattoo, and that your logo be no larger than 9 inches wide, and 5 inches tall. Also, I cannot advertise any sectarian, or racial logos, slogans or URL's which point to such sites. Also, if the content is of an 'adult' nature, it must be censored to ensure that it is legal to display in a public area.

Todays award goes to............

U.S. students say press freedoms go too far
By Greg Toppo, USA TODAY
One in three U.S. high school students say the press ought to be more restricted, and even more say the government should approve newspaper stories before readers see them, according to a survey being released today.
The survey of 112,003 students finds that 36% believe newspapers should get "government approval" of stories before publishing; 51% say they should be able to publish freely; 13% have no opinion.

Asked whether the press enjoys "too much freedom," not enough or about the right amount, 32% say "too much," and 37% say it has the right amount. Ten percent say it has too little.

The survey of First Amendment rights was commissioned by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and conducted last spring by the University of Connecticut. It also questioned 327 principals and 7,889 teachers.

The findings aren't surprising to Jack Dvorak, director of the High School Journalism Institute at Indiana University in Bloomington. "Even professional journalists are often unaware of a lot of the freedoms that might be associated with the First Amendment," he says.

The survey "confirms what a lot of people who are interested in this area have known for a long time," he says: Kids aren't learning enough about the First Amendment in history, civics or English classes. It also tracks closely with recent findings of adults' attitudes.

"It's part of our Constitution, so this should be part of a formal education," says Dvorak, who has worked with student journalists since 1968.

Todays award goes to............

U.S. students say press freedoms go too far
By Greg Toppo, USA TODAY
One in three U.S. high school students say the press ought to be more restricted, and even more say the government should approve newspaper stories before readers see them, according to a survey being released today.
The survey of 112,003 students finds that 36% believe newspapers should get "government approval" of stories before publishing; 51% say they should be able to publish freely; 13% have no opinion.

Asked whether the press enjoys "too much freedom," not enough or about the right amount, 32% say "too much," and 37% say it has the right amount. Ten percent say it has too little.

The survey of First Amendment rights was commissioned by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and conducted last spring by the University of Connecticut. It also questioned 327 principals and 7,889 teachers.

The findings aren't surprising to Jack Dvorak, director of the High School Journalism Institute at Indiana University in Bloomington. "Even professional journalists are often unaware of a lot of the freedoms that might be associated with the First Amendment," he says.

The survey "confirms what a lot of people who are interested in this area have known for a long time," he says: Kids aren't learning enough about the First Amendment in history, civics or English classes. It also tracks closely with recent findings of adults' attitudes.

"It's part of our Constitution, so this should be part of a formal education," says Dvorak, who has worked with student journalists since 1968.

Todays award goes to............

U.S. students say press freedoms go too far
By Greg Toppo, USA TODAY
One in three U.S. high school students say the press ought to be more restricted, and even more say the government should approve newspaper stories before readers see them, according to a survey being released today.
The survey of 112,003 students finds that 36% believe newspapers should get "government approval" of stories before publishing; 51% say they should be able to publish freely; 13% have no opinion.

Asked whether the press enjoys "too much freedom," not enough or about the right amount, 32% say "too much," and 37% say it has the right amount. Ten percent say it has too little.

The survey of First Amendment rights was commissioned by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and conducted last spring by the University of Connecticut. It also questioned 327 principals and 7,889 teachers.

The findings aren't surprising to Jack Dvorak, director of the High School Journalism Institute at Indiana University in Bloomington. "Even professional journalists are often unaware of a lot of the freedoms that might be associated with the First Amendment," he says.

The survey "confirms what a lot of people who are interested in this area have known for a long time," he says: Kids aren't learning enough about the First Amendment in history, civics or English classes. It also tracks closely with recent findings of adults' attitudes.

"It's part of our Constitution, so this should be part of a formal education," says Dvorak, who has worked with student journalists since 1968.

If only we paid in Euros

Oil prices won't fall, OPEC says
By Associated Press | January 31, 2005

VIENNA -- Consumers received no solace yesterday from OPEC, which said oil prices near $50 per barrel would remain high through the spring, even as the cartel decided to keep its production ceiling unchanged.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries' current quota of 27 million barrels a day was set in December, when it agreed to shave output by 1 million barrels. But the 10 members of the group subject to the quota -- Iraq is not bound by a limit -- have been overproducing by a total of 500,000 barrels daily.

Kuwaiti oil minister Sheik Ahmad Fahd al-Ahmad al-Sabah, who leads OPEC, said he has permission to conduct a phone meeting before the next gathering, on March 16 in Iran, to address output if market conditions warrant. Al-Sabah said prices have been driven higher amid fears of a cold winter in Europe and North America, where demand for heating oil is high. He said OPEC's decision was aimed at bringing more stability to the market.

If only we paid in Euros

Oil prices won't fall, OPEC says
By Associated Press | January 31, 2005

VIENNA -- Consumers received no solace yesterday from OPEC, which said oil prices near $50 per barrel would remain high through the spring, even as the cartel decided to keep its production ceiling unchanged.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries' current quota of 27 million barrels a day was set in December, when it agreed to shave output by 1 million barrels. But the 10 members of the group subject to the quota -- Iraq is not bound by a limit -- have been overproducing by a total of 500,000 barrels daily.

Kuwaiti oil minister Sheik Ahmad Fahd al-Ahmad al-Sabah, who leads OPEC, said he has permission to conduct a phone meeting before the next gathering, on March 16 in Iran, to address output if market conditions warrant. Al-Sabah said prices have been driven higher amid fears of a cold winter in Europe and North America, where demand for heating oil is high. He said OPEC's decision was aimed at bringing more stability to the market.

If only we paid in Euros

Oil prices won't fall, OPEC says
By Associated Press | January 31, 2005

VIENNA -- Consumers received no solace yesterday from OPEC, which said oil prices near $50 per barrel would remain high through the spring, even as the cartel decided to keep its production ceiling unchanged.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries' current quota of 27 million barrels a day was set in December, when it agreed to shave output by 1 million barrels. But the 10 members of the group subject to the quota -- Iraq is not bound by a limit -- have been overproducing by a total of 500,000 barrels daily.

Kuwaiti oil minister Sheik Ahmad Fahd al-Ahmad al-Sabah, who leads OPEC, said he has permission to conduct a phone meeting before the next gathering, on March 16 in Iran, to address output if market conditions warrant. Al-Sabah said prices have been driven higher amid fears of a cold winter in Europe and North America, where demand for heating oil is high. He said OPEC's decision was aimed at bringing more stability to the market.

a job well done....uh huh...

Flooding in I-93 tunnel snarls traffic for hours
By Michael Levenson, Globe Correspondent | January 31, 2005

A temporary pump that siphons water from the Dewey Square portion of the Interstate 93 southbound tunnel suddenly lost power yesterday, flooding the left lane and backing up traffic for miles, state highway officials said.

A half-foot of water flooded into the tunnel from snow melting above ground, forcing State Police to close the left lane near the Chinatown exit for about five hours, from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

During that time, traffic backed up past the Storrow Drive exit.

The pump failure was the latest in a string of problems on the Big Dig, and quickly revived memories of serious flooding in the tunnel that erupted last September, when water gushed from leaks in the tunnel walls.

a job well done....uh huh...

Flooding in I-93 tunnel snarls traffic for hours
By Michael Levenson, Globe Correspondent | January 31, 2005

A temporary pump that siphons water from the Dewey Square portion of the Interstate 93 southbound tunnel suddenly lost power yesterday, flooding the left lane and backing up traffic for miles, state highway officials said.

A half-foot of water flooded into the tunnel from snow melting above ground, forcing State Police to close the left lane near the Chinatown exit for about five hours, from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

During that time, traffic backed up past the Storrow Drive exit.

The pump failure was the latest in a string of problems on the Big Dig, and quickly revived memories of serious flooding in the tunnel that erupted last September, when water gushed from leaks in the tunnel walls.

a job well done....uh huh...

Flooding in I-93 tunnel snarls traffic for hours
By Michael Levenson, Globe Correspondent | January 31, 2005

A temporary pump that siphons water from the Dewey Square portion of the Interstate 93 southbound tunnel suddenly lost power yesterday, flooding the left lane and backing up traffic for miles, state highway officials said.

A half-foot of water flooded into the tunnel from snow melting above ground, forcing State Police to close the left lane near the Chinatown exit for about five hours, from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

During that time, traffic backed up past the Storrow Drive exit.

The pump failure was the latest in a string of problems on the Big Dig, and quickly revived memories of serious flooding in the tunnel that erupted last September, when water gushed from leaks in the tunnel walls.

except for the Sunni's that is

Bush calls vote 'resounding success' for democracy
By Farah Stockman, Globe Staff | January 31, 2005

WASHINGTON -- President Bush congratulated Iraqis yesterday on what he called the ''resounding success" of their election, and signaled that he saw the vote as a victory for his larger vision of bringing democracy to the Arab world.

''Today, the people of Iraq have spoken to the world, and the world is hearing the voice of freedom from the center of the Middle East," Bush said at a press briefing after Iraqi polls closed yesterday. ''There is more distance to travel on the road to democracy, yet Iraqis are proving they are equal to the challenge."

except for the Sunni's that is

Bush calls vote 'resounding success' for democracy
By Farah Stockman, Globe Staff | January 31, 2005

WASHINGTON -- President Bush congratulated Iraqis yesterday on what he called the ''resounding success" of their election, and signaled that he saw the vote as a victory for his larger vision of bringing democracy to the Arab world.

''Today, the people of Iraq have spoken to the world, and the world is hearing the voice of freedom from the center of the Middle East," Bush said at a press briefing after Iraqi polls closed yesterday. ''There is more distance to travel on the road to democracy, yet Iraqis are proving they are equal to the challenge."

except for the Sunni's that is

Bush calls vote 'resounding success' for democracy
By Farah Stockman, Globe Staff | January 31, 2005

WASHINGTON -- President Bush congratulated Iraqis yesterday on what he called the ''resounding success" of their election, and signaled that he saw the vote as a victory for his larger vision of bringing democracy to the Arab world.

''Today, the people of Iraq have spoken to the world, and the world is hearing the voice of freedom from the center of the Middle East," Bush said at a press briefing after Iraqi polls closed yesterday. ''There is more distance to travel on the road to democracy, yet Iraqis are proving they are equal to the challenge."

Oh Bill Bailey

A plea for troops to come home
By Maria Sacchetti, Globe Staff | January 31, 2005

After polls closed on Election Day in Iraq yesterday, war veterans and their families brought the battle to save loved ones in the war to the home front, calling on President Bush to pull out US troops before thousands more die.

The veterans and their families received standing ovations from a crowd of more than 400 people at Faneuil Hall, at the first of a string of unofficial public hearings to be held over the next week in the Boston area.

Testimony came from two groups that favor removing US troops immediately, the 150-member Iraq Veterans Against the War, which was created last summer, and Military Families Speak Out, a 2,000-family organization founded in 2002.

Organizers said they are holding hearings at colleges, churches, and community centers to reveal the war's effect on the military and their families. Yesterday, a 17-year-old Billerica girl whose father is in Iraq wept as she worried about what he will be like when he returns. A former soldier from New York told how his twin brother, also a soldier, returned in a body bag. A Belchertown woman said her family's joy over her brother's return from Iraq melted into grief when he killed himself.

Oh Bill Bailey

A plea for troops to come home
By Maria Sacchetti, Globe Staff | January 31, 2005

After polls closed on Election Day in Iraq yesterday, war veterans and their families brought the battle to save loved ones in the war to the home front, calling on President Bush to pull out US troops before thousands more die.

The veterans and their families received standing ovations from a crowd of more than 400 people at Faneuil Hall, at the first of a string of unofficial public hearings to be held over the next week in the Boston area.

Testimony came from two groups that favor removing US troops immediately, the 150-member Iraq Veterans Against the War, which was created last summer, and Military Families Speak Out, a 2,000-family organization founded in 2002.

Organizers said they are holding hearings at colleges, churches, and community centers to reveal the war's effect on the military and their families. Yesterday, a 17-year-old Billerica girl whose father is in Iraq wept as she worried about what he will be like when he returns. A former soldier from New York told how his twin brother, also a soldier, returned in a body bag. A Belchertown woman said her family's joy over her brother's return from Iraq melted into grief when he killed himself.

Oh Bill Bailey

A plea for troops to come home
By Maria Sacchetti, Globe Staff | January 31, 2005

After polls closed on Election Day in Iraq yesterday, war veterans and their families brought the battle to save loved ones in the war to the home front, calling on President Bush to pull out US troops before thousands more die.

The veterans and their families received standing ovations from a crowd of more than 400 people at Faneuil Hall, at the first of a string of unofficial public hearings to be held over the next week in the Boston area.

Testimony came from two groups that favor removing US troops immediately, the 150-member Iraq Veterans Against the War, which was created last summer, and Military Families Speak Out, a 2,000-family organization founded in 2002.

Organizers said they are holding hearings at colleges, churches, and community centers to reveal the war's effect on the military and their families. Yesterday, a 17-year-old Billerica girl whose father is in Iraq wept as she worried about what he will be like when he returns. A former soldier from New York told how his twin brother, also a soldier, returned in a body bag. A Belchertown woman said her family's joy over her brother's return from Iraq melted into grief when he killed himself.

safe haven in my hummer / Thanks John P.

BAGHDAD — The man replacing the mayor of Baghdad — who was assassinated for his pro-American loyalties — says he is not worried about his ties to Washington.
In fact, he'd like to erect a monument to honor President Bush in the middle of the city.

"We will build a statue for Bush," said Ali Fadel, the former provincial council chairman. "He is the symbol of freedom."

Fadel's predecessor, Ali al-Haidari, was gunned down Jan. 4 when militants opened fire on his armor-covered BMW as it traveled with a three-car convoy.

Fadel said he received numerous threats on his life as the council chairman, and expects to get many more in his new post.

"My life is cheap," Fadel said. "Everything is cheap for my country."

As Iraq prepared for a volatile election that is being watched across the world, Fadel heaped praise on the United States.

Fadel acknowledged that many in his country appear ungrateful for America's foreign assistance. He said most Iraqis are still in "shock" over the changes, and need time to adjust.

Any public monument to Bush is likely to further incense terrorist forces, who have attacked American troops and their supporters for months.

Fadel said he is undaunted.

"We have a lot of work and we are especially grateful to the soldiers of the U.S.A. for freeing our country of tyranny," Fadel said.

As for his own protection, the new mayor will be traveling in a new $150,000 SUV complete with bulletproof windows and flat-resistant tires.

safe haven in my hummer / Thanks John P.

BAGHDAD — The man replacing the mayor of Baghdad — who was assassinated for his pro-American loyalties — says he is not worried about his ties to Washington.
In fact, he'd like to erect a monument to honor President Bush in the middle of the city.

"We will build a statue for Bush," said Ali Fadel, the former provincial council chairman. "He is the symbol of freedom."

Fadel's predecessor, Ali al-Haidari, was gunned down Jan. 4 when militants opened fire on his armor-covered BMW as it traveled with a three-car convoy.

Fadel said he received numerous threats on his life as the council chairman, and expects to get many more in his new post.

"My life is cheap," Fadel said. "Everything is cheap for my country."

As Iraq prepared for a volatile election that is being watched across the world, Fadel heaped praise on the United States.

Fadel acknowledged that many in his country appear ungrateful for America's foreign assistance. He said most Iraqis are still in "shock" over the changes, and need time to adjust.

Any public monument to Bush is likely to further incense terrorist forces, who have attacked American troops and their supporters for months.

Fadel said he is undaunted.

"We have a lot of work and we are especially grateful to the soldiers of the U.S.A. for freeing our country of tyranny," Fadel said.

As for his own protection, the new mayor will be traveling in a new $150,000 SUV complete with bulletproof windows and flat-resistant tires.

safe haven in my hummer / Thanks John P.

BAGHDAD — The man replacing the mayor of Baghdad — who was assassinated for his pro-American loyalties — says he is not worried about his ties to Washington.
In fact, he'd like to erect a monument to honor President Bush in the middle of the city.

"We will build a statue for Bush," said Ali Fadel, the former provincial council chairman. "He is the symbol of freedom."

Fadel's predecessor, Ali al-Haidari, was gunned down Jan. 4 when militants opened fire on his armor-covered BMW as it traveled with a three-car convoy.

Fadel said he received numerous threats on his life as the council chairman, and expects to get many more in his new post.

"My life is cheap," Fadel said. "Everything is cheap for my country."

As Iraq prepared for a volatile election that is being watched across the world, Fadel heaped praise on the United States.

Fadel acknowledged that many in his country appear ungrateful for America's foreign assistance. He said most Iraqis are still in "shock" over the changes, and need time to adjust.

Any public monument to Bush is likely to further incense terrorist forces, who have attacked American troops and their supporters for months.

Fadel said he is undaunted.

"We have a lot of work and we are especially grateful to the soldiers of the U.S.A. for freeing our country of tyranny," Fadel said.

As for his own protection, the new mayor will be traveling in a new $150,000 SUV complete with bulletproof windows and flat-resistant tires.

Audit: $9 Billion Unaccounted for in Iraq / John P.

By LARRY MARGASAK
WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. occupation authority in Iraq was unable to keep track of nearly $9 billion it transferred to government ministries, which lacked financial controls, security, communications and adequate staff, an inspector general has found.

The U.S. officials relied on Iraqi audit agencies to account for the funds but those offices were not even functioning when the funds were transferred between October 2003 and June 2004, according to an audit by a special U.S. inspector general.

The findings were released Sunday by Stuart Bowen Jr., special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction. Bowen issued several reports on the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), the U.S. occupation government that ruled Iraq from June 2003 to June 2004.

The official who led the CPA, L. Paul Bremer III, submitted a blistering, written reply to the findings, saying the report had ``many misconceptions and inaccuracies,'' and lacked professional judgment.


Bremer complained the report ``assumes that Western-style budgeting and accounting procedures could be immediately and fully implemented in the midst of a war.''


The inspector general said the occupying agency disbursed $8.8 billion to Iraqi ministries ``without assurance the moneys were properly accounted for.''


U.S. officials, the report said, ``did not establish or implement sufficient managerial, financial and contractural controls.'' There was no way to verify that the money was used for its intended purposes of financing humanitarian needs, economic reconstruction, repair of facilities, disarmament and civil administration.


Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said Sunday the authority was hamstrung by ``extraordinary conditions'' under which it worked throughout its mission.


``We simply disagree with the audit's conclusion that the CPA provided less than adequate controls,'' Whitman said.


Turning over the money ``was in keeping with the CPA's responsibility to transfer these funds and administrative responsibilities to the Iraqi ministries as an essential part of restoring Iraqi governance.''


The inspector general cited an International Monetary Fund assessment in October, 2003 on the poor state of Iraqi government offices. The assessment found ministries suffered from staff shortages, poor security, disruptions in communications, damage and looting of government buildings, and lack of financial policies.


Some of the transferred funds may have paid ``ghost'' employees, the inspector general found.


CPA staff learned that 8,206 guards were on the payroll at one ministry, but only 602 could be accounted for, the report said. At another ministry, U.S. officials found 1,417 guards on the payroll but could only confirm 642.


When staff members of the U.S. occupation government recommended that payrolls be verified before salary payments, CPA financial officials ``stated the CPA would rather overpay salaries than risk not paying employees and inciting violence,'' the inspector general said.


Bremer attacked many of the specific findings. Among his rebuttal points:


With more than a million Iraqi families depending on government salaries, there would have been an increased security threat if civil servants had not been paid until modern pay records were developed.


U.S. policy was to build up the Iraqi force guarding government facilities, and it was better to accept an imperfect payroll system than ``to stop paying armed young men'' providing security.


The report was suggesting the CPA ``should have placed hundreds of CPA auditors'' in Iraqi ministries, contrary to United States and United Nations policy of giving Iraqi ministers responsibility for their budgets.


The CPA established a program review board, an independent judiciary and inspector generals in each agency to fight corruption.


The inspector general's report rejected Bremer's criticism. It concluded that despite the war, ``We believe the CPA management of Iraq's national budget process and oversight of Iraqi funds was burdened by severe inefficiencies and poor management.''

Audit: $9 Billion Unaccounted for in Iraq / John P.

By LARRY MARGASAK
WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. occupation authority in Iraq was unable to keep track of nearly $9 billion it transferred to government ministries, which lacked financial controls, security, communications and adequate staff, an inspector general has found.

The U.S. officials relied on Iraqi audit agencies to account for the funds but those offices were not even functioning when the funds were transferred between October 2003 and June 2004, according to an audit by a special U.S. inspector general.

The findings were released Sunday by Stuart Bowen Jr., special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction. Bowen issued several reports on the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), the U.S. occupation government that ruled Iraq from June 2003 to June 2004.

The official who led the CPA, L. Paul Bremer III, submitted a blistering, written reply to the findings, saying the report had ``many misconceptions and inaccuracies,'' and lacked professional judgment.


Bremer complained the report ``assumes that Western-style budgeting and accounting procedures could be immediately and fully implemented in the midst of a war.''


The inspector general said the occupying agency disbursed $8.8 billion to Iraqi ministries ``without assurance the moneys were properly accounted for.''


U.S. officials, the report said, ``did not establish or implement sufficient managerial, financial and contractural controls.'' There was no way to verify that the money was used for its intended purposes of financing humanitarian needs, economic reconstruction, repair of facilities, disarmament and civil administration.


Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said Sunday the authority was hamstrung by ``extraordinary conditions'' under which it worked throughout its mission.


``We simply disagree with the audit's conclusion that the CPA provided less than adequate controls,'' Whitman said.


Turning over the money ``was in keeping with the CPA's responsibility to transfer these funds and administrative responsibilities to the Iraqi ministries as an essential part of restoring Iraqi governance.''


The inspector general cited an International Monetary Fund assessment in October, 2003 on the poor state of Iraqi government offices. The assessment found ministries suffered from staff shortages, poor security, disruptions in communications, damage and looting of government buildings, and lack of financial policies.


Some of the transferred funds may have paid ``ghost'' employees, the inspector general found.


CPA staff learned that 8,206 guards were on the payroll at one ministry, but only 602 could be accounted for, the report said. At another ministry, U.S. officials found 1,417 guards on the payroll but could only confirm 642.


When staff members of the U.S. occupation government recommended that payrolls be verified before salary payments, CPA financial officials ``stated the CPA would rather overpay salaries than risk not paying employees and inciting violence,'' the inspector general said.


Bremer attacked many of the specific findings. Among his rebuttal points:


With more than a million Iraqi families depending on government salaries, there would have been an increased security threat if civil servants had not been paid until modern pay records were developed.


U.S. policy was to build up the Iraqi force guarding government facilities, and it was better to accept an imperfect payroll system than ``to stop paying armed young men'' providing security.


The report was suggesting the CPA ``should have placed hundreds of CPA auditors'' in Iraqi ministries, contrary to United States and United Nations policy of giving Iraqi ministers responsibility for their budgets.


The CPA established a program review board, an independent judiciary and inspector generals in each agency to fight corruption.


The inspector general's report rejected Bremer's criticism. It concluded that despite the war, ``We believe the CPA management of Iraq's national budget process and oversight of Iraqi funds was burdened by severe inefficiencies and poor management.''

Audit: $9 Billion Unaccounted for in Iraq / John P.

By LARRY MARGASAK
WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. occupation authority in Iraq was unable to keep track of nearly $9 billion it transferred to government ministries, which lacked financial controls, security, communications and adequate staff, an inspector general has found.

The U.S. officials relied on Iraqi audit agencies to account for the funds but those offices were not even functioning when the funds were transferred between October 2003 and June 2004, according to an audit by a special U.S. inspector general.

The findings were released Sunday by Stuart Bowen Jr., special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction. Bowen issued several reports on the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), the U.S. occupation government that ruled Iraq from June 2003 to June 2004.

The official who led the CPA, L. Paul Bremer III, submitted a blistering, written reply to the findings, saying the report had ``many misconceptions and inaccuracies,'' and lacked professional judgment.


Bremer complained the report ``assumes that Western-style budgeting and accounting procedures could be immediately and fully implemented in the midst of a war.''


The inspector general said the occupying agency disbursed $8.8 billion to Iraqi ministries ``without assurance the moneys were properly accounted for.''


U.S. officials, the report said, ``did not establish or implement sufficient managerial, financial and contractural controls.'' There was no way to verify that the money was used for its intended purposes of financing humanitarian needs, economic reconstruction, repair of facilities, disarmament and civil administration.


Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said Sunday the authority was hamstrung by ``extraordinary conditions'' under which it worked throughout its mission.


``We simply disagree with the audit's conclusion that the CPA provided less than adequate controls,'' Whitman said.


Turning over the money ``was in keeping with the CPA's responsibility to transfer these funds and administrative responsibilities to the Iraqi ministries as an essential part of restoring Iraqi governance.''


The inspector general cited an International Monetary Fund assessment in October, 2003 on the poor state of Iraqi government offices. The assessment found ministries suffered from staff shortages, poor security, disruptions in communications, damage and looting of government buildings, and lack of financial policies.


Some of the transferred funds may have paid ``ghost'' employees, the inspector general found.


CPA staff learned that 8,206 guards were on the payroll at one ministry, but only 602 could be accounted for, the report said. At another ministry, U.S. officials found 1,417 guards on the payroll but could only confirm 642.


When staff members of the U.S. occupation government recommended that payrolls be verified before salary payments, CPA financial officials ``stated the CPA would rather overpay salaries than risk not paying employees and inciting violence,'' the inspector general said.


Bremer attacked many of the specific findings. Among his rebuttal points:


With more than a million Iraqi families depending on government salaries, there would have been an increased security threat if civil servants had not been paid until modern pay records were developed.


U.S. policy was to build up the Iraqi force guarding government facilities, and it was better to accept an imperfect payroll system than ``to stop paying armed young men'' providing security.


The report was suggesting the CPA ``should have placed hundreds of CPA auditors'' in Iraqi ministries, contrary to United States and United Nations policy of giving Iraqi ministers responsibility for their budgets.


The CPA established a program review board, an independent judiciary and inspector generals in each agency to fight corruption.


The inspector general's report rejected Bremer's criticism. It concluded that despite the war, ``We believe the CPA management of Iraq's national budget process and oversight of Iraqi funds was burdened by severe inefficiencies and poor management.''

January 29, 2005

hefty



MOSCOW, January 28 (Itar-Tass) - The customs service in a Volga region has seized more than 37 kilograms of depleted uranium.

A spokesman at the Federal Customs Service told Itar-Tass on Friday that workers of the Orenburg customs service spotted the dangerous cargo on Wednesday during examination of a car with a radiation detector.

The radiation-emitting object was a cylindrical protective container intended for remote manipulation with radioactive substances.

It contained 37.5 kilograms of uranium-238, which is a depleted form.

An owner of the container described it in a customs declaration as a “dumb-bell”. He said he had found it at a dump and used it for exercise and sometimes straightened nails with it.

Specialists are looking for the origin of the container.

hefty



MOSCOW, January 28 (Itar-Tass) - The customs service in a Volga region has seized more than 37 kilograms of depleted uranium.

A spokesman at the Federal Customs Service told Itar-Tass on Friday that workers of the Orenburg customs service spotted the dangerous cargo on Wednesday during examination of a car with a radiation detector.

The radiation-emitting object was a cylindrical protective container intended for remote manipulation with radioactive substances.

It contained 37.5 kilograms of uranium-238, which is a depleted form.

An owner of the container described it in a customs declaration as a “dumb-bell”. He said he had found it at a dump and used it for exercise and sometimes straightened nails with it.

Specialists are looking for the origin of the container.

hefty



MOSCOW, January 28 (Itar-Tass) - The customs service in a Volga region has seized more than 37 kilograms of depleted uranium.

A spokesman at the Federal Customs Service told Itar-Tass on Friday that workers of the Orenburg customs service spotted the dangerous cargo on Wednesday during examination of a car with a radiation detector.

The radiation-emitting object was a cylindrical protective container intended for remote manipulation with radioactive substances.

It contained 37.5 kilograms of uranium-238, which is a depleted form.

An owner of the container described it in a customs declaration as a “dumb-bell”. He said he had found it at a dump and used it for exercise and sometimes straightened nails with it.

Specialists are looking for the origin of the container.

what's a bobby to do

A BABY boy landed his dad with a £50 litter fine — for throwing an empty can out of his pram.

Elliot Nightingale became the latest victim of Britain’s daft fines culture at just 16-MONTHS-OLD.

He playfully tossed the Pepsi Max can into a bush after 21-year-old dad Lee put it in his pram.

But it was spotted by a litter enforcement officer who stung the jobless labourer with the on-the-spot penalty.

Last night Lee, of Oldham, Greater Manchester, branded the fine “absolutely ridiculous”.

Lee, who lives with the tot’s mum Teresa Nadin, 19, added: “Elliot wouldn’t understand he was doing anything wrong. I tried to get the can out of the bush but it was thorny and I had to leave it.

“I offered to go back and try again but was told it was too late and I had to pay.”

Graham Boundy, of Oldham Council, warned that anyone aged ten or over would be fined for dropping litter, including cigarette butts, chewing gum, apple cores, crisp packets and drink containers.

He added: “The council is committed to maintaining a clean and pleasant borough.”

what's a bobby to do

A BABY boy landed his dad with a £50 litter fine — for throwing an empty can out of his pram.

Elliot Nightingale became the latest victim of Britain’s daft fines culture at just 16-MONTHS-OLD.

He playfully tossed the Pepsi Max can into a bush after 21-year-old dad Lee put it in his pram.

But it was spotted by a litter enforcement officer who stung the jobless labourer with the on-the-spot penalty.

Last night Lee, of Oldham, Greater Manchester, branded the fine “absolutely ridiculous”.

Lee, who lives with the tot’s mum Teresa Nadin, 19, added: “Elliot wouldn’t understand he was doing anything wrong. I tried to get the can out of the bush but it was thorny and I had to leave it.

“I offered to go back and try again but was told it was too late and I had to pay.”

Graham Boundy, of Oldham Council, warned that anyone aged ten or over would be fined for dropping litter, including cigarette butts, chewing gum, apple cores, crisp packets and drink containers.

He added: “The council is committed to maintaining a clean and pleasant borough.”

what's a bobby to do

A BABY boy landed his dad with a £50 litter fine — for throwing an empty can out of his pram.

Elliot Nightingale became the latest victim of Britain’s daft fines culture at just 16-MONTHS-OLD.

He playfully tossed the Pepsi Max can into a bush after 21-year-old dad Lee put it in his pram.

But it was spotted by a litter enforcement officer who stung the jobless labourer with the on-the-spot penalty.

Last night Lee, of Oldham, Greater Manchester, branded the fine “absolutely ridiculous”.

Lee, who lives with the tot’s mum Teresa Nadin, 19, added: “Elliot wouldn’t understand he was doing anything wrong. I tried to get the can out of the bush but it was thorny and I had to leave it.

“I offered to go back and try again but was told it was too late and I had to pay.”

Graham Boundy, of Oldham Council, warned that anyone aged ten or over would be fined for dropping litter, including cigarette butts, chewing gum, apple cores, crisp packets and drink containers.

He added: “The council is committed to maintaining a clean and pleasant borough.”

Say it ain't so George....Thanks Susan D.

Officials say third columnist was paid to promote Bush policy
Helped HHS push marriage initiative
By Siobhan McDonough, Associated Press | January 29, 2005

WASHINGTON -- The Department of Health and Human Services said yesterday that a third conservative columnist was paid to help promote a Bush administration policy.

ADVERTISEMENT

Columnist Mike McManus received $10,000 to train marriage counselors as part of the agency's initiative promoting marriage to build strong families, said Wade Horn, assistant secretary for children and families.

The disclosure was made as the Government Accountability Office sent a letter to the Education Department yesterday asking for all materials related to its contract dealings with a prominent conservative media commentator.

That department, through a contract with the public relations firm Ketchum, hired commentator Armstrong Williams to produce ads that featured former Education Secretary Rod Paige and promoted President Bush's No Child Left Behind law. The contract also committed Williams, who is black, to provide media access for Paige and to persuade other black journalists to talk about the law.

Federal law bans the use of public money on propaganda.

The Education Department received the GAO letter and is reviewing it, department spokeswoman Susan Aspey said. ''Secretary Spelling has made it very clear she is getting to the bottom of this."

Margaret Spellings started this week, replacing Paige. In a letter to Senators Arlen Specter, Republican of Pennsylvania, and Tom Harkin, Democrat of Iowa, dated yesterday, Spellings wrote, ''At this point, what I can say is that at a minimum, there were errors of judgments at the Department, and I am diligently working to get to the bottom of it all."

The lawmakers are on a panel that oversees education spending, and their subcommittee is looking into the matter.

Say it ain't so George....Thanks Susan D.

Officials say third columnist was paid to promote Bush policy
Helped HHS push marriage initiative
By Siobhan McDonough, Associated Press | January 29, 2005

WASHINGTON -- The Department of Health and Human Services said yesterday that a third conservative columnist was paid to help promote a Bush administration policy.

ADVERTISEMENT

Columnist Mike McManus received $10,000 to train marriage counselors as part of the agency's initiative promoting marriage to build strong families, said Wade Horn, assistant secretary for children and families.

The disclosure was made as the Government Accountability Office sent a letter to the Education Department yesterday asking for all materials related to its contract dealings with a prominent conservative media commentator.

That department, through a contract with the public relations firm Ketchum, hired commentator Armstrong Williams to produce ads that featured former Education Secretary Rod Paige and promoted President Bush's No Child Left Behind law. The contract also committed Williams, who is black, to provide media access for Paige and to persuade other black journalists to talk about the law.

Federal law bans the use of public money on propaganda.

The Education Department received the GAO letter and is reviewing it, department spokeswoman Susan Aspey said. ''Secretary Spelling has made it very clear she is getting to the bottom of this."

Margaret Spellings started this week, replacing Paige. In a letter to Senators Arlen Specter, Republican of Pennsylvania, and Tom Harkin, Democrat of Iowa, dated yesterday, Spellings wrote, ''At this point, what I can say is that at a minimum, there were errors of judgments at the Department, and I am diligently working to get to the bottom of it all."

The lawmakers are on a panel that oversees education spending, and their subcommittee is looking into the matter.

Say it ain't so George....Thanks Susan D.

Officials say third columnist was paid to promote Bush policy
Helped HHS push marriage initiative
By Siobhan McDonough, Associated Press | January 29, 2005

WASHINGTON -- The Department of Health and Human Services said yesterday that a third conservative columnist was paid to help promote a Bush administration policy.

ADVERTISEMENT

Columnist Mike McManus received $10,000 to train marriage counselors as part of the agency's initiative promoting marriage to build strong families, said Wade Horn, assistant secretary for children and families.

The disclosure was made as the Government Accountability Office sent a letter to the Education Department yesterday asking for all materials related to its contract dealings with a prominent conservative media commentator.

That department, through a contract with the public relations firm Ketchum, hired commentator Armstrong Williams to produce ads that featured former Education Secretary Rod Paige and promoted President Bush's No Child Left Behind law. The contract also committed Williams, who is black, to provide media access for Paige and to persuade other black journalists to talk about the law.

Federal law bans the use of public money on propaganda.

The Education Department received the GAO letter and is reviewing it, department spokeswoman Susan Aspey said. ''Secretary Spelling has made it very clear she is getting to the bottom of this."

Margaret Spellings started this week, replacing Paige. In a letter to Senators Arlen Specter, Republican of Pennsylvania, and Tom Harkin, Democrat of Iowa, dated yesterday, Spellings wrote, ''At this point, what I can say is that at a minimum, there were errors of judgments at the Department, and I am diligently working to get to the bottom of it all."

The lawmakers are on a panel that oversees education spending, and their subcommittee is looking into the matter.

oh my God

Creationists at the gate
January 29, 2005

EMBOLDENED BY the important role social conservatives played in the reelection of George W. Bush, believers in the biblical account of man's origins are redoubling their efforts to have it made an alternative to Darwin's theory of evolution in public schools. According to the pro-Darwinism National Center for Science Education, efforts are underway in 43 states to nibble away at the clear line the Supreme Court laid down in 1987, when it banned Bible-based creationism as an intrusion of religion into the classroom.

ADVERTISEMENT

To keep this line firmly defined and to ensure that US children learn the importance of evolution, the bedrock of biology, elected officials and educators should be alert to attempts to sneak Genesis into the teaching of science.

In Georgia, a federal judge stepped in this month to stop schools in Cobb County from placing stickers inside biology textbooks urging students to consider alternatives to evolution. The county school board members who favored the stickers said they would appeal.

In Dover, Pa., the school board ordered ninth grade science teachers to read a board-dictated statement criticizing evolution and calling students' attention to an alternative approach known as intelligent design. Earlier this month, the teachers refused. An administrator was preparing to step in and do it, unless a suit by the American Civil Liberties Union brings a halt to the exercise.

Intelligent design tries to skirt the church vs. state line by theorizing that the sheer complexity of organisms, including man, requires an intelligent designer. God or the Creator is not mentioned explicitly. The principal exponent of the view is a Seattle-based organization called the Discovery Institute.

Proponents of intelligent design want the public to believe that solid, peer-reviewed science backs up this explanation for the development of man and other species, but that is not the case. The governing council of one biology journal in Washington state that published an article by a Discovery Institute fellow quickly disavowed it.

Critics of Darwinism make much of saying it is only a theory. But it is one that has stood the test of intense scientific inquiry and brings together a wealth of observable phenomena. Among scientists, there is disagreement about the pace of species development and about the events that caused the extinctions of species. But biologists do not challenge the basic genius of Darwin's discovery.

US students have trouble enough keeping up with their counterparts in foreign countries in mastering the sciences. In biology, they should not have to contend with religion-based efforts to introduce misinformation into their classes. Genesis has a place in comparative religion classes, not public school science classes.

oh my God

Creationists at the gate
January 29, 2005

EMBOLDENED BY the important role social conservatives played in the reelection of George W. Bush, believers in the biblical account of man's origins are redoubling their efforts to have it made an alternative to Darwin's theory of evolution in public schools. According to the pro-Darwinism National Center for Science Education, efforts are underway in 43 states to nibble away at the clear line the Supreme Court laid down in 1987, when it banned Bible-based creationism as an intrusion of religion into the classroom.

ADVERTISEMENT

To keep this line firmly defined and to ensure that US children learn the importance of evolution, the bedrock of biology, elected officials and educators should be alert to attempts to sneak Genesis into the teaching of science.

In Georgia, a federal judge stepped in this month to stop schools in Cobb County from placing stickers inside biology textbooks urging students to consider alternatives to evolution. The county school board members who favored the stickers said they would appeal.

In Dover, Pa., the school board ordered ninth grade science teachers to read a board-dictated statement criticizing evolution and calling students' attention to an alternative approach known as intelligent design. Earlier this month, the teachers refused. An administrator was preparing to step in and do it, unless a suit by the American Civil Liberties Union brings a halt to the exercise.

Intelligent design tries to skirt the church vs. state line by theorizing that the sheer complexity of organisms, including man, requires an intelligent designer. God or the Creator is not mentioned explicitly. The principal exponent of the view is a Seattle-based organization called the Discovery Institute.

Proponents of intelligent design want the public to believe that solid, peer-reviewed science backs up this explanation for the development of man and other species, but that is not the case. The governing council of one biology journal in Washington state that published an article by a Discovery Institute fellow quickly disavowed it.

Critics of Darwinism make much of saying it is only a theory. But it is one that has stood the test of intense scientific inquiry and brings together a wealth of observable phenomena. Among scientists, there is disagreement about the pace of species development and about the events that caused the extinctions of species. But biologists do not challenge the basic genius of Darwin's discovery.

US students have trouble enough keeping up with their counterparts in foreign countries in mastering the sciences. In biology, they should not have to contend with religion-based efforts to introduce misinformation into their classes. Genesis has a place in comparative religion classes, not public school science classes.

oh my God

Creationists at the gate
January 29, 2005

EMBOLDENED BY the important role social conservatives played in the reelection of George W. Bush, believers in the biblical account of man's origins are redoubling their efforts to have it made an alternative to Darwin's theory of evolution in public schools. According to the pro-Darwinism National Center for Science Education, efforts are underway in 43 states to nibble away at the clear line the Supreme Court laid down in 1987, when it banned Bible-based creationism as an intrusion of religion into the classroom.

ADVERTISEMENT

To keep this line firmly defined and to ensure that US children learn the importance of evolution, the bedrock of biology, elected officials and educators should be alert to attempts to sneak Genesis into the teaching of science.

In Georgia, a federal judge stepped in this month to stop schools in Cobb County from placing stickers inside biology textbooks urging students to consider alternatives to evolution. The county school board members who favored the stickers said they would appeal.

In Dover, Pa., the school board ordered ninth grade science teachers to read a board-dictated statement criticizing evolution and calling students' attention to an alternative approach known as intelligent design. Earlier this month, the teachers refused. An administrator was preparing to step in and do it, unless a suit by the American Civil Liberties Union brings a halt to the exercise.

Intelligent design tries to skirt the church vs. state line by theorizing that the sheer complexity of organisms, including man, requires an intelligent designer. God or the Creator is not mentioned explicitly. The principal exponent of the view is a Seattle-based organization called the Discovery Institute.

Proponents of intelligent design want the public to believe that solid, peer-reviewed science backs up this explanation for the development of man and other species, but that is not the case. The governing council of one biology journal in Washington state that published an article by a Discovery Institute fellow quickly disavowed it.

Critics of Darwinism make much of saying it is only a theory. But it is one that has stood the test of intense scientific inquiry and brings together a wealth of observable phenomena. Among scientists, there is disagreement about the pace of species development and about the events that caused the extinctions of species. But biologists do not challenge the basic genius of Darwin's discovery.

US students have trouble enough keeping up with their counterparts in foreign countries in mastering the sciences. In biology, they should not have to contend with religion-based efforts to introduce misinformation into their classes. Genesis has a place in comparative religion classes, not public school science classes.

things are just dandy


As mergers grow, so does glut of Hub office space
By Thomas C. Palmer Jr., Globe Staff | January 29, 2005

A takeover of Gillette Co. that shrinks its executive presence in Boston could leave a lot of empty floors toward the top of the 52-story Prudential building, adding to the city's existing merger-driven glut of sublease office space.

Real estate executives said yesterday that Gillette, a longtime Pru tenant, occupies about 480,000 square feet of space on about 20 floors -- mostly the ones with the best views, on floors 38 and above. That's about 40 percent of all the space in the 1.2 million-square-foot tower.

Meantime, the other signature building in the Back Bay, the Hancock Tower, is already feeling the effects of the 2004 takeover of its headquarters company, John Hancock Financial Services Inc., by Manulife Financial Corp.

"You've got 420,000 square feet at the Hancock Tower subleasing," said David A. Martel, executive director of Cushman & Wakefield of Massachusetts Inc.

"Those are huge availabilities in two of the icon towers or premier buildings in town. It's certainly a cause for concern, given the demand."

things are just dandy


As mergers grow, so does glut of Hub office space
By Thomas C. Palmer Jr., Globe Staff | January 29, 2005

A takeover of Gillette Co. that shrinks its executive presence in Boston could leave a lot of empty floors toward the top of the 52-story Prudential building, adding to the city's existing merger-driven glut of sublease office space.

Real estate executives said yesterday that Gillette, a longtime Pru tenant, occupies about 480,000 square feet of space on about 20 floors -- mostly the ones with the best views, on floors 38 and above. That's about 40 percent of all the space in the 1.2 million-square-foot tower.

Meantime, the other signature building in the Back Bay, the Hancock Tower, is already feeling the effects of the 2004 takeover of its headquarters company, John Hancock Financial Services Inc., by Manulife Financial Corp.

"You've got 420,000 square feet at the Hancock Tower subleasing," said David A. Martel, executive director of Cushman & Wakefield of Massachusetts Inc.

"Those are huge availabilities in two of the icon towers or premier buildings in town. It's certainly a cause for concern, given the demand."

things are just dandy


As mergers grow, so does glut of Hub office space
By Thomas C. Palmer Jr., Globe Staff | January 29, 2005

A takeover of Gillette Co. that shrinks its executive presence in Boston could leave a lot of empty floors toward the top of the 52-story Prudential building, adding to the city's existing merger-driven glut of sublease office space.

Real estate executives said yesterday that Gillette, a longtime Pru tenant, occupies about 480,000 square feet of space on about 20 floors -- mostly the ones with the best views, on floors 38 and above. That's about 40 percent of all the space in the 1.2 million-square-foot tower.

Meantime, the other signature building in the Back Bay, the Hancock Tower, is already feeling the effects of the 2004 takeover of its headquarters company, John Hancock Financial Services Inc., by Manulife Financial Corp.

"You've got 420,000 square feet at the Hancock Tower subleasing," said David A. Martel, executive director of Cushman & Wakefield of Massachusetts Inc.

"Those are huge availabilities in two of the icon towers or premier buildings in town. It's certainly a cause for concern, given the demand."

todays............joke of the day...thanks charlie

Peyton Manning, after living a full life, died. When he got to heaven, God was showing him around. They came to a modest little house with a faded Colts flag in the window. "This house is yours for eternity, Peyton,"
> said God.
> >
> "This is very special; not everyone gets a house up here." Peyton felt special, indeed, and walked up to his house. On his way up the porch, he noticed another house just around the corner. It was a 3-story mansion
with a blue and red sidewalk, a 50 foot tall flagpole with an enormous Patriots logo flag, and in every window, a Pat Patriot towel.

> Peyton looked at God and said "God, I'm not trying to be ungrateful, but I have a question. I was an a! ll-pro QB, I hold many NFL records, and I even went to the Hall of Fame."

> God said "So what's your point Peyton?"

> "Well, why does Tom Brady get a better house than me?"
>
> God chuckled, and said "Peyton, that's not Tom's house, it's mine."

todays............joke of the day...thanks charlie

Peyton Manning, after living a full life, died. When he got to heaven, God was showing him around. They came to a modest little house with a faded Colts flag in the window. "This house is yours for eternity, Peyton,"
> said God.
> >
> "This is very special; not everyone gets a house up here." Peyton felt special, indeed, and walked up to his house. On his way up the porch, he noticed another house just around the corner. It was a 3-story mansion
with a blue and red sidewalk, a 50 foot tall flagpole with an enormous Patriots logo flag, and in every window, a Pat Patriot towel.

> Peyton looked at God and said "God, I'm not trying to be ungrateful, but I have a question. I was an a! ll-pro QB, I hold many NFL records, and I even went to the Hall of Fame."

> God said "So what's your point Peyton?"

> "Well, why does Tom Brady get a better house than me?"
>
> God chuckled, and said "Peyton, that's not Tom's house, it's mine."

todays............joke of the day...thanks charlie

Peyton Manning, after living a full life, died. When he got to heaven, God was showing him around. They came to a modest little house with a faded Colts flag in the window. "This house is yours for eternity, Peyton,"
> said God.
> >
> "This is very special; not everyone gets a house up here." Peyton felt special, indeed, and walked up to his house. On his way up the porch, he noticed another house just around the corner. It was a 3-story mansion
with a blue and red sidewalk, a 50 foot tall flagpole with an enormous Patriots logo flag, and in every window, a Pat Patriot towel.

> Peyton looked at God and said "God, I'm not trying to be ungrateful, but I have a question. I was an a! ll-pro QB, I hold many NFL records, and I even went to the Hall of Fame."

> God said "So what's your point Peyton?"

> "Well, why does Tom Brady get a better house than me?"
>
> God chuckled, and said "Peyton, that's not Tom's house, it's mine."

January 27, 2005

THE VOTE......thanks to Bridget

The Antiwar Movement and the Iraqi Elections


1) Election Under Occupation

The media theater called the Iraqi election is under way.
U.S. television anchor people are broadcasting live from
Baghdad, breathlessly describing the preparations for
Sunday's display of so-called democracy.

It is important to emphasive the circumstances under which
this election is being held. More than 150,000 U.S.
troops occupy the country, patrolling the streets with
guns trained on Iraqi civilians. Iraq is under a state of
emergency, with expanded police powers and a curfew.

This is and election at gunpoint, which will be supervised
by U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte. Negroponte built an
impressive resume as a brutal enforcer of U.S. policy
through murder, rape, and torture. Negroponte served as
U.S. Ambassador to Honduras from 1981-1985; a period
during which Honduras was the launching pad from which the
Reagan administration conducted its violent attacks on the
people of Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Guatemala. The
U.S-backed atrocities, which were condemned by the
International World Court in the Hague, included
kidnappings, rape, torture and killing of suspected
dissidents. Reports from the Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights in Honduras alleged that Negroponte oversaw
the expansion of U.S training camp and military base on
Honduran territory, where the U.S. trained Contra
terrorists, and where the military secretly detained,
tortured and executed Honduran suspected dissidents.

This is the person the Bush Administration would have us
believe is going to bring democracy to Iraq.

Assisting him will be two US-funded organizations with
long records of manipulating overseas elections on behalf
of U.S. corporate interests, the National Democratic
Institute for International Affairs (NDI) and the
International Republican Institute (IRI). These groups,
both of which are tied to covert plans to install
US-favored regimes overseas, are among organizations that
have been given more than $80 million for political
activities in Iraq.

Both organizations work closely with the National
Endowment for Democracy and the U.S. Agency for
International Development, long used by the CIA for covert
operations abroad. They were, for example, involved in
orchestrating the failed coup and recall referendum in
Venezuela in an attempt to remove the democratically
elected and popular President Hugo Chavez.

This election is being conducted at gunpoint, administered
by a war criminal, and stage-managed by CIA front
companies. To pretend that this has anything to do with
democracy is outrageous. The Iraqi people recognize this
--among expatriates, 90 percent haven't even bothered to
register to vote on Sunday.

What, then is the purpose of the phony election? It is
actually directed at the U.S. public, which is growing
increasingly disillusioned with the war. The sole intent
of the election is to provide legitimacy for the
occupation, to marginalize the resistance movement, and
create an illusion of progress. The election, like the
phony transfer of power, will change nothing on the ground
in Iraq. On January 31, the day after the election, more
than 150,000 U.S. troops will still occupy Iraq, the
torture chambers of Abu Ghraib will still be full of Iraqi
prisoners, and CIA employee Iyad Allawi will still be the
U.S.-appointed dictator.


2) The Iraqi People Have Already Voted -- Against the
Occupation

The Iraqi people have already expressed their will; they
are overwhelmingly opposed to the occupation of their
country. The majority of Iraqi people want the U.S.
troops to leave and do not believe that the U.S. and
Britain should be involved in holding elections in Iraq,
according to several polls.

Many have already cast their ballot against colonial
occupation by joining the nationwide uprising. The
intelligence chief for the puppet regime in Iraq, General
Mohamed Abdullah Shahwani, admitted that the resistance
now numbers more than 200,000.

The resistance is made up of many difference forces, with
different ideologies and goals. They are united by the
determination to free their country from U.S. occupation.

The right of people to resist occupation by arms is a
basic right recognized under international law and the
Geneva Convention. The people of Iraq have a right to
fight back against the occupation of their country, the
torture of their people, and the bombing of their cities.
They also have a right to expect the solidarity of all
who oppose the criminal war. It is not the role of the
antiwar movement to debate the ideology or tactics of the
resistance; it is our job to stand in solidarity with them
and do everything possible to assist them by working to
end the occupation of their country.


3) What Next for the Antiwar Movement?

The phony elections will not silence the Iraqi resistance.
It is important to remember that in the months since the
last time the U.S. attempted to put an "Iraqi face" on the
occupation, with the phony transfer of power and
appointment of Iyad Allawi as puppet dictator, the
resistance has spread and become more sophisticated and
more entrenched.

As the resistance grows, we in the U.S. have an obligation
not to be deterred by false elections or talk of
"timetables." We must stand with the people of Iraq and
take up their demand: the immediate, unconditional, and
complete withdrawal of all U.S. occupation forces.

We must organize a united struggle to end the occupation.
This is now more important than ever before. George W.
Bush made it clear in his inauguration sermon that he
intends to wage continual, global war. We must meet his
call to war with renewed determination and unity.

The global antiwar movement has called for massive
protests on the weekend of March 19-20. In the U.S., the
Troops Out Now Coalition is organizing local and regional
demonstrations to demand an end to the occupation,
including a massive regional convergence on Central Park
on March 19. The International Action Center, part of the
Troops Out Now Coalition, calls upon all progressive and
antiwar organizations to join us in the streets on March
19 & 20 to demand: "Troops Out Now!"



March 19
Troops Out Now!
March on Central Park in NYC!
Regional Demonstrations Across the U.S. & Worldwide


The International Action Center

THE VOTE......thanks to Bridget

The Antiwar Movement and the Iraqi Elections


1) Election Under Occupation

The media theater called the Iraqi election is under way.
U.S. television anchor people are broadcasting live from
Baghdad, breathlessly describing the preparations for
Sunday's display of so-called democracy.

It is important to emphasive the circumstances under which
this election is being held. More than 150,000 U.S.
troops occupy the country, patrolling the streets with
guns trained on Iraqi civilians. Iraq is under a state of
emergency, with expanded police powers and a curfew.

This is and election at gunpoint, which will be supervised
by U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte. Negroponte built an
impressive resume as a brutal enforcer of U.S. policy
through murder, rape, and torture. Negroponte served as
U.S. Ambassador to Honduras from 1981-1985; a period
during which Honduras was the launching pad from which the
Reagan administration conducted its violent attacks on the
people of Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Guatemala. The
U.S-backed atrocities, which were condemned by the
International World Court in the Hague, included
kidnappings, rape, torture and killing of suspected
dissidents. Reports from the Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights in Honduras alleged that Negroponte oversaw
the expansion of U.S training camp and military base on
Honduran territory, where the U.S. trained Contra
terrorists, and where the military secretly detained,
tortured and executed Honduran suspected dissidents.

This is the person the Bush Administration would have us
believe is going to bring democracy to Iraq.

Assisting him will be two US-funded organizations with
long records of manipulating overseas elections on behalf
of U.S. corporate interests, the National Democratic
Institute for International Affairs (NDI) and the
International Republican Institute (IRI). These groups,
both of which are tied to covert plans to install
US-favored regimes overseas, are among organizations that
have been given more than $80 million for political
activities in Iraq.

Both organizations work closely with the National
Endowment for Democracy and the U.S. Agency for
International Development, long used by the CIA for covert
operations abroad. They were, for example, involved in
orchestrating the failed coup and recall referendum in
Venezuela in an attempt to remove the democratically
elected and popular President Hugo Chavez.

This election is being conducted at gunpoint, administered
by a war criminal, and stage-managed by CIA front
companies. To pretend that this has anything to do with
democracy is outrageous. The Iraqi people recognize this
--among expatriates, 90 percent haven't even bothered to
register to vote on Sunday.

What, then is the purpose of the phony election? It is
actually directed at the U.S. public, which is growing
increasingly disillusioned with the war. The sole intent
of the election is to provide legitimacy for the
occupation, to marginalize the resistance movement, and
create an illusion of progress. The election, like the
phony transfer of power, will change nothing on the ground
in Iraq. On January 31, the day after the election, more
than 150,000 U.S. troops will still occupy Iraq, the
torture chambers of Abu Ghraib will still be full of Iraqi
prisoners, and CIA employee Iyad Allawi will still be the
U.S.-appointed dictator.


2) The Iraqi People Have Already Voted -- Against the
Occupation

The Iraqi people have already expressed their will; they
are overwhelmingly opposed to the occupation of their
country. The majority of Iraqi people want the U.S.
troops to leave and do not believe that the U.S. and
Britain should be involved in holding elections in Iraq,
according to several polls.

Many have already cast their ballot against colonial
occupation by joining the nationwide uprising. The
intelligence chief for the puppet regime in Iraq, General
Mohamed Abdullah Shahwani, admitted that the resistance
now numbers more than 200,000.

The resistance is made up of many difference forces, with
different ideologies and goals. They are united by the
determination to free their country from U.S. occupation.

The right of people to resist occupation by arms is a
basic right recognized under international law and the
Geneva Convention. The people of Iraq have a right to
fight back against the occupation of their country, the
torture of their people, and the bombing of their cities.
They also have a right to expect the solidarity of all
who oppose the criminal war. It is not the role of the
antiwar movement to debate the ideology or tactics of the
resistance; it is our job to stand in solidarity with them
and do everything possible to assist them by working to
end the occupation of their country.


3) What Next for the Antiwar Movement?

The phony elections will not silence the Iraqi resistance.
It is important to remember that in the months since the
last time the U.S. attempted to put an "Iraqi face" on the
occupation, with the phony transfer of power and
appointment of Iyad Allawi as puppet dictator, the
resistance has spread and become more sophisticated and
more entrenched.

As the resistance grows, we in the U.S. have an obligation
not to be deterred by false elections or talk of
"timetables." We must stand with the people of Iraq and
take up their demand: the immediate, unconditional, and
complete withdrawal of all U.S. occupation forces.

We must organize a united struggle to end the occupation.
This is now more important than ever before. George W.
Bush made it clear in his inauguration sermon that he
intends to wage continual, global war. We must meet his
call to war with renewed determination and unity.

The global antiwar movement has called for massive
protests on the weekend of March 19-20. In the U.S., the
Troops Out Now Coalition is organizing local and regional
demonstrations to demand an end to the occupation,
including a massive regional convergence on Central Park
on March 19. The International Action Center, part of the
Troops Out Now Coalition, calls upon all progressive and
antiwar organizations to join us in the streets on March
19 & 20 to demand: "Troops Out Now!"



March 19
Troops Out Now!
March on Central Park in NYC!
Regional Demonstrations Across the U.S. & Worldwide


The International Action Center

THE VOTE......thanks to Bridget

The Antiwar Movement and the Iraqi Elections


1) Election Under Occupation

The media theater called the Iraqi election is under way.
U.S. television anchor people are broadcasting live from
Baghdad, breathlessly describing the preparations for
Sunday's display of so-called democracy.

It is important to emphasive the circumstances under which
this election is being held. More than 150,000 U.S.
troops occupy the country, patrolling the streets with
guns trained on Iraqi civilians. Iraq is under a state of
emergency, with expanded police powers and a curfew.

This is and election at gunpoint, which will be supervised
by U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte. Negroponte built an
impressive resume as a brutal enforcer of U.S. policy
through murder, rape, and torture. Negroponte served as
U.S. Ambassador to Honduras from 1981-1985; a period
during which Honduras was the launching pad from which the
Reagan administration conducted its violent attacks on the
people of Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Guatemala. The
U.S-backed atrocities, which were condemned by the
International World Court in the Hague, included
kidnappings, rape, torture and killing of suspected
dissidents. Reports from the Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights in Honduras alleged that Negroponte oversaw
the expansion of U.S training camp and military base on
Honduran territory, where the U.S. trained Contra
terrorists, and where the military secretly detained,
tortured and executed Honduran suspected dissidents.

This is the person the Bush Administration would have us
believe is going to bring democracy to Iraq.

Assisting him will be two US-funded organizations with
long records of manipulating overseas elections on behalf
of U.S. corporate interests, the National Democratic
Institute for International Affairs (NDI) and the
International Republican Institute (IRI). These groups,
both of which are tied to covert plans to install
US-favored regimes overseas, are among organizations that
have been given more than $80 million for political
activities in Iraq.

Both organizations work closely with the National
Endowment for Democracy and the U.S. Agency for
International Development, long used by the CIA for covert
operations abroad. They were, for example, involved in
orchestrating the failed coup and recall referendum in
Venezuela in an attempt to remove the democratically
elected and popular President Hugo Chavez.

This election is being conducted at gunpoint, administered
by a war criminal, and stage-managed by CIA front
companies. To pretend that this has anything to do with
democracy is outrageous. The Iraqi people recognize this
--among expatriates, 90 percent haven't even bothered to
register to vote on Sunday.

What, then is the purpose of the phony election? It is
actually directed at the U.S. public, which is growing
increasingly disillusioned with the war. The sole intent
of the election is to provide legitimacy for the
occupation, to marginalize the resistance movement, and
create an illusion of progress. The election, like the
phony transfer of power, will change nothing on the ground
in Iraq. On January 31, the day after the election, more
than 150,000 U.S. troops will still occupy Iraq, the
torture chambers of Abu Ghraib will still be full of Iraqi
prisoners, and CIA employee Iyad Allawi will still be the
U.S.-appointed dictator.


2) The Iraqi People Have Already Voted -- Against the
Occupation

The Iraqi people have already expressed their will; they
are overwhelmingly opposed to the occupation of their
country. The majority of Iraqi people want the U.S.
troops to leave and do not believe that the U.S. and
Britain should be involved in holding elections in Iraq,
according to several polls.

Many have already cast their ballot against colonial
occupation by joining the nationwide uprising. The
intelligence chief for the puppet regime in Iraq, General
Mohamed Abdullah Shahwani, admitted that the resistance
now numbers more than 200,000.

The resistance is made up of many difference forces, with
different ideologies and goals. They are united by the
determination to free their country from U.S. occupation.

The right of people to resist occupation by arms is a
basic right recognized under international law and the
Geneva Convention. The people of Iraq have a right to
fight back against the occupation of their country, the
torture of their people, and the bombing of their cities.
They also have a right to expect the solidarity of all
who oppose the criminal war. It is not the role of the
antiwar movement to debate the ideology or tactics of the
resistance; it is our job to stand in solidarity with them
and do everything possible to assist them by working to
end the occupation of their country.


3) What Next for the Antiwar Movement?

The phony elections will not silence the Iraqi resistance.
It is important to remember that in the months since the
last time the U.S. attempted to put an "Iraqi face" on the
occupation, with the phony transfer of power and
appointment of Iyad Allawi as puppet dictator, the
resistance has spread and become more sophisticated and
more entrenched.

As the resistance grows, we in the U.S. have an obligation
not to be deterred by false elections or talk of
"timetables." We must stand with the people of Iraq and
take up their demand: the immediate, unconditional, and
complete withdrawal of all U.S. occupation forces.

We must organize a united struggle to end the occupation.
This is now more important than ever before. George W.
Bush made it clear in his inauguration sermon that he
intends to wage continual, global war. We must meet his
call to war with renewed determination and unity.

The global antiwar movement has called for massive
protests on the weekend of March 19-20. In the U.S., the
Troops Out Now Coalition is organizing local and regional
demonstrations to demand an end to the occupation,
including a massive regional convergence on Central Park
on March 19. The International Action Center, part of the
Troops Out Now Coalition, calls upon all progressive and
antiwar organizations to join us in the streets on March
19 & 20 to demand: "Troops Out Now!"



March 19
Troops Out Now!
March on Central Park in NYC!
Regional Demonstrations Across the U.S. & Worldwide


The International Action Center

Payola......... Thanks Susan D.

Writer Backing Bush Plan Had Gotten Federal Contract

By Howard Kurtz

In 2002, syndicated columnist Maggie Gallagher repeatedly defended President Bush's push for a $300 million initiative encouraging marriage as a way of strengthening families.

"The Bush marriage initiative would emphasize the importance of marriage to poor couples" and "educate teens on the value of delaying childbearing until marriage," she wrote in National Review Online, for example, adding that this could "carry big payoffs down the road for taxpayers and children."

But Gallagher failed to mention that she had a $21,500 contract with the Department of Health and Human Services to help promote the president's proposal. Her work under the contract, which ran from January through October 2002, included drafting a magazine article for the HHS official overseeing the initiative, writing brochures for the program and conducting a briefing for department officials.

"Did I violate journalistic ethics by not disclosing it?" Gallagher said yesterday. "I don't know. You tell me." She said she would have "been happy to tell anyone who called me" about the contract but that "frankly, it never occurred to me" to disclose it.

Later in the day, Gallagher filed a column in which she said that "I should have disclosed a government contract when I later wrote about the Bush marriage initiative. I would have, if I had remembered it. My apologies to my readers."

In the interview, Gallagher said her situation was "not really anything near" the recent controversy involving conservative commentator Armstrong Williams. Earlier this month Williams apologized for not disclosing a $241,000 contract with the Education Department, awarded through the Ketchum public relations firm, to promote Bush's No Child Left Behind law through advertising on his cable TV and syndicated radio shows and other efforts.

Gallagher received an additional $20,000 from the Bush administration in 2002 and 2003 for writing a report, titled "Can Government Strengthen Marriage?", for a private organization called the National Fatherhood Initiative. That report, published last year, was funded by a Justice Department grant, said NFI spokesman Vincent DiCaro. Gallagher said she was "aware vaguely" that her work was federally funded.

In columns, television appearances and interviews with such newspapers as The Washington Post, Gallagher last year defended Bush's proposal for a constitutional amendment barring same-sex marriage.

Wade Horn, HHS assistant secretary for children and families, said his division hired Gallagher as "a well-known national expert," along with other specialists in the field, to help devise the president's healthy marriage initiative. "It's not unusual in the federal government to do that," he said.

The essay Gallagher drafted appeared under Horn's byline -- with the headline "Closing the Marriage Gap" -- and ran in Crisis magazine, which promotes humanism rooted in Catholic Church teachings. Horn said most of the brochures written by Gallagher -- such as "The Top Ten Reasons Marriage Matters" -- were not used as the program evolved.

"I don't see any comparison between what has been alleged with Armstrong Williams and what we did with Maggie Gallagher," said Horn, who founded the National Fatherhood Initiative before entering government. "We didn't pay her to write columns. We didn't pay her to promote the president's healthy marriage initiative at all. What we wanted to do was use her expertise." The Education Department is now investigating the Williams contract.

The author of three books on marriage, Gallagher is president of the Washington-based Institute for Marriage and Public Policy, a frequent television guest and has written on the subject for such publications as the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Weekly Standard.

While she was being paid by HHS in 2002, Gallagher in her syndicated column dismissed the arguments against "President Bush's modest marriage initiative" as "nonsense," writing: "Bush plans to use a tiny fraction of surplus welfare dollars to fund marriage education services for at-risk couples."

In a column later that year that appeared in the Myrtle Beach (S.C.) Sun News, Gallagher said Bush's welfare-revision bill would, among other things, encourage "stable marriages," and that it was a "scandal" for Democrats to reject the president's plan and fail to offer an alternative.

National Review Editor Rich Lowry said of the HHS contract: "We would have preferred that she told us, and we would have disclosed it in her bio."

Tribune Media Services dropped Williams's column after his administration contract was disclosed. Universal Press Syndicate, which distributes Gallagher's column, plans no such action.

"We did not know about the contract," spokeswoman Kathie Kerr said. "We would have probably liked to have known." But, Kerr said, "this is what we hired Maggie to write about. It probably wouldn't have changed our mind to distribute it."

Payola......... Thanks Susan D.

Writer Backing Bush Plan Had Gotten Federal Contract

By Howard Kurtz

In 2002, syndicated columnist Maggie Gallagher repeatedly defended President Bush's push for a $300 million initiative encouraging marriage as a way of strengthening families.

"The Bush marriage initiative would emphasize the importance of marriage to poor couples" and "educate teens on the value of delaying childbearing until marriage," she wrote in National Review Online, for example, adding that this could "carry big payoffs down the road for taxpayers and children."

But Gallagher failed to mention that she had a $21,500 contract with the Department of Health and Human Services to help promote the president's proposal. Her work under the contract, which ran from January through October 2002, included drafting a magazine article for the HHS official overseeing the initiative, writing brochures for the program and conducting a briefing for department officials.

"Did I violate journalistic ethics by not disclosing it?" Gallagher said yesterday. "I don't know. You tell me." She said she would have "been happy to tell anyone who called me" about the contract but that "frankly, it never occurred to me" to disclose it.

Later in the day, Gallagher filed a column in which she said that "I should have disclosed a government contract when I later wrote about the Bush marriage initiative. I would have, if I had remembered it. My apologies to my readers."

In the interview, Gallagher said her situation was "not really anything near" the recent controversy involving conservative commentator Armstrong Williams. Earlier this month Williams apologized for not disclosing a $241,000 contract with the Education Department, awarded through the Ketchum public relations firm, to promote Bush's No Child Left Behind law through advertising on his cable TV and syndicated radio shows and other efforts.

Gallagher received an additional $20,000 from the Bush administration in 2002 and 2003 for writing a report, titled "Can Government Strengthen Marriage?", for a private organization called the National Fatherhood Initiative. That report, published last year, was funded by a Justice Department grant, said NFI spokesman Vincent DiCaro. Gallagher said she was "aware vaguely" that her work was federally funded.

In columns, television appearances and interviews with such newspapers as The Washington Post, Gallagher last year defended Bush's proposal for a constitutional amendment barring same-sex marriage.

Wade Horn, HHS assistant secretary for children and families, said his division hired Gallagher as "a well-known national expert," along with other specialists in the field, to help devise the president's healthy marriage initiative. "It's not unusual in the federal government to do that," he said.

The essay Gallagher drafted appeared under Horn's byline -- with the headline "Closing the Marriage Gap" -- and ran in Crisis magazine, which promotes humanism rooted in Catholic Church teachings. Horn said most of the brochures written by Gallagher -- such as "The Top Ten Reasons Marriage Matters" -- were not used as the program evolved.

"I don't see any comparison between what has been alleged with Armstrong Williams and what we did with Maggie Gallagher," said Horn, who founded the National Fatherhood Initiative before entering government. "We didn't pay her to write columns. We didn't pay her to promote the president's healthy marriage initiative at all. What we wanted to do was use her expertise." The Education Department is now investigating the Williams contract.

The author of three books on marriage, Gallagher is president of the Washington-based Institute for Marriage and Public Policy, a frequent television guest and has written on the subject for such publications as the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Weekly Standard.

While she was being paid by HHS in 2002, Gallagher in her syndicated column dismissed the arguments against "President Bush's modest marriage initiative" as "nonsense," writing: "Bush plans to use a tiny fraction of surplus welfare dollars to fund marriage education services for at-risk couples."

In a column later that year that appeared in the Myrtle Beach (S.C.) Sun News, Gallagher said Bush's welfare-revision bill would, among other things, encourage "stable marriages," and that it was a "scandal" for Democrats to reject the president's plan and fail to offer an alternative.

National Review Editor Rich Lowry said of the HHS contract: "We would have preferred that she told us, and we would have disclosed it in her bio."

Tribune Media Services dropped Williams's column after his administration contract was disclosed. Universal Press Syndicate, which distributes Gallagher's column, plans no such action.

"We did not know about the contract," spokeswoman Kathie Kerr said. "We would have probably liked to have known." But, Kerr said, "this is what we hired Maggie to write about. It probably wouldn't have changed our mind to distribute it."

Payola......... Thanks Susan D.

Writer Backing Bush Plan Had Gotten Federal Contract

By Howard Kurtz

In 2002, syndicated columnist Maggie Gallagher repeatedly defended President Bush's push for a $300 million initiative encouraging marriage as a way of strengthening families.

"The Bush marriage initiative would emphasize the importance of marriage to poor couples" and "educate teens on the value of delaying childbearing until marriage," she wrote in National Review Online, for example, adding that this could "carry big payoffs down the road for taxpayers and children."

But Gallagher failed to mention that she had a $21,500 contract with the Department of Health and Human Services to help promote the president's proposal. Her work under the contract, which ran from January through October 2002, included drafting a magazine article for the HHS official overseeing the initiative, writing brochures for the program and conducting a briefing for department officials.

"Did I violate journalistic ethics by not disclosing it?" Gallagher said yesterday. "I don't know. You tell me." She said she would have "been happy to tell anyone who called me" about the contract but that "frankly, it never occurred to me" to disclose it.

Later in the day, Gallagher filed a column in which she said that "I should have disclosed a government contract when I later wrote about the Bush marriage initiative. I would have, if I had remembered it. My apologies to my readers."

In the interview, Gallagher said her situation was "not really anything near" the recent controversy involving conservative commentator Armstrong Williams. Earlier this month Williams apologized for not disclosing a $241,000 contract with the Education Department, awarded through the Ketchum public relations firm, to promote Bush's No Child Left Behind law through advertising on his cable TV and syndicated radio shows and other efforts.

Gallagher received an additional $20,000 from the Bush administration in 2002 and 2003 for writing a report, titled "Can Government Strengthen Marriage?", for a private organization called the National Fatherhood Initiative. That report, published last year, was funded by a Justice Department grant, said NFI spokesman Vincent DiCaro. Gallagher said she was "aware vaguely" that her work was federally funded.

In columns, television appearances and interviews with such newspapers as The Washington Post, Gallagher last year defended Bush's proposal for a constitutional amendment barring same-sex marriage.

Wade Horn, HHS assistant secretary for children and families, said his division hired Gallagher as "a well-known national expert," along with other specialists in the field, to help devise the president's healthy marriage initiative. "It's not unusual in the federal government to do that," he said.

The essay Gallagher drafted appeared under Horn's byline -- with the headline "Closing the Marriage Gap" -- and ran in Crisis magazine, which promotes humanism rooted in Catholic Church teachings. Horn said most of the brochures written by Gallagher -- such as "The Top Ten Reasons Marriage Matters" -- were not used as the program evolved.

"I don't see any comparison between what has been alleged with Armstrong Williams and what we did with Maggie Gallagher," said Horn, who founded the National Fatherhood Initiative before entering government. "We didn't pay her to write columns. We didn't pay her to promote the president's healthy marriage initiative at all. What we wanted to do was use her expertise." The Education Department is now investigating the Williams contract.

The author of three books on marriage, Gallagher is president of the Washington-based Institute for Marriage and Public Policy, a frequent television guest and has written on the subject for such publications as the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Weekly Standard.

While she was being paid by HHS in 2002, Gallagher in her syndicated column dismissed the arguments against "President Bush's modest marriage initiative" as "nonsense," writing: "Bush plans to use a tiny fraction of surplus welfare dollars to fund marriage education services for at-risk couples."

In a column later that year that appeared in the Myrtle Beach (S.C.) Sun News, Gallagher said Bush's welfare-revision bill would, among other things, encourage "stable marriages," and that it was a "scandal" for Democrats to reject the president's plan and fail to offer an alternative.

National Review Editor Rich Lowry said of the HHS contract: "We would have preferred that she told us, and we would have disclosed it in her bio."

Tribune Media Services dropped Williams's column after his administration contract was disclosed. Universal Press Syndicate, which distributes Gallagher's column, plans no such action.

"We did not know about the contract," spokeswoman Kathie Kerr said. "We would have probably liked to have known." But, Kerr said, "this is what we hired Maggie to write about. It probably wouldn't have changed our mind to distribute it."

enough to make you laugh

Bush calls a halt to paying columnists for PR
By Associated Press | January 27, 2005

WASHINGTON -- President Bush ordered his Cabinet secretaries yesterday not to hire columnists to promote their agendas after disclosure that a second writer was paid to research an administration initiative.

The president said he expects his agency heads will ''make sure that that practice doesn't go forward."

''All our Cabinet secretaries must realize that we will not be paying commentators to advance our agenda. Our agenda ought to be able to stand on its own two feet," Bush said at a news conference.

Bush's remarks came a day after syndicated columnist Maggie Gallagher apologized to readers for not disclosing a $21,500 contract with the Department of Health and Human Services to help create materials promoting the agency's $300 million initiative to encourage marriage.

Bush also said the White House had not been aware that the Education Department paid commentator and columnist Armstrong Williams $240,000 to plug its policies. That contract came to light Jan. 7.

Bush said there ''needs to be a nice independent relationship between the White House and the press, the administration and the press."

enough to make you laugh

Bush calls a halt to paying columnists for PR
By Associated Press | January 27, 2005

WASHINGTON -- President Bush ordered his Cabinet secretaries yesterday not to hire columnists to promote their agendas after disclosure that a second writer was paid to research an administration initiative.

The president said he expects his agency heads will ''make sure that that practice doesn't go forward."

''All our Cabinet secretaries must realize that we will not be paying commentators to advance our agenda. Our agenda ought to be able to stand on its own two feet," Bush said at a news conference.

Bush's remarks came a day after syndicated columnist Maggie Gallagher apologized to readers for not disclosing a $21,500 contract with the Department of Health and Human Services to help create materials promoting the agency's $300 million initiative to encourage marriage.

Bush also said the White House had not been aware that the Education Department paid commentator and columnist Armstrong Williams $240,000 to plug its policies. That contract came to light Jan. 7.

Bush said there ''needs to be a nice independent relationship between the White House and the press, the administration and the press."

enough to make you laugh

Bush calls a halt to paying columnists for PR
By Associated Press | January 27, 2005

WASHINGTON -- President Bush ordered his Cabinet secretaries yesterday not to hire columnists to promote their agendas after disclosure that a second writer was paid to research an administration initiative.

The president said he expects his agency heads will ''make sure that that practice doesn't go forward."

''All our Cabinet secretaries must realize that we will not be paying commentators to advance our agenda. Our agenda ought to be able to stand on its own two feet," Bush said at a news conference.

Bush's remarks came a day after syndicated columnist Maggie Gallagher apologized to readers for not disclosing a $21,500 contract with the Department of Health and Human Services to help create materials promoting the agency's $300 million initiative to encourage marriage.

Bush also said the White House had not been aware that the Education Department paid commentator and columnist Armstrong Williams $240,000 to plug its policies. That contract came to light Jan. 7.

Bush said there ''needs to be a nice independent relationship between the White House and the press, the administration and the press."

87!

At 87, she shovels for others
Waltham woman takes few breaks clearing flakes
January 27, 2005

It is a ubiquitous prod during snowstorms in New England: Please help your elderly neighbors. But on River Street in Waltham, no one gets the chance. By the time many residents get home from work, 87-year-old Nellie Tambascia has already shoveled her sidewalk. And theirs, too.

"They're young," she said yesterday. "They have to go to work, so they don't have time for this."

When it snows as it has been snowing this week, Tambascia is out all day. Yesterday, she patiently traversed her driveway and front walk, as well as those of her neighbors, from 5 a.m. to 4 p.m., taking breaks only for coffee and lunch.

The retired school crossing guard took on the chore after her husband died in 1994. He, too, had shoveled out the neighbors. Now, she says, she talks to him while she works. Sometimes she asks him to make it stop snowing.

"It's not working," she said yesterday. "Mama mia, did we have snow!"

87!

At 87, she shovels for others
Waltham woman takes few breaks clearing flakes
January 27, 2005

It is a ubiquitous prod during snowstorms in New England: Please help your elderly neighbors. But on River Street in Waltham, no one gets the chance. By the time many residents get home from work, 87-year-old Nellie Tambascia has already shoveled her sidewalk. And theirs, too.

"They're young," she said yesterday. "They have to go to work, so they don't have time for this."

When it snows as it has been snowing this week, Tambascia is out all day. Yesterday, she patiently traversed her driveway and front walk, as well as those of her neighbors, from 5 a.m. to 4 p.m., taking breaks only for coffee and lunch.

The retired school crossing guard took on the chore after her husband died in 1994. He, too, had shoveled out the neighbors. Now, she says, she talks to him while she works. Sometimes she asks him to make it stop snowing.

"It's not working," she said yesterday. "Mama mia, did we have snow!"

87!

At 87, she shovels for others
Waltham woman takes few breaks clearing flakes
January 27, 2005

It is a ubiquitous prod during snowstorms in New England: Please help your elderly neighbors. But on River Street in Waltham, no one gets the chance. By the time many residents get home from work, 87-year-old Nellie Tambascia has already shoveled her sidewalk. And theirs, too.

"They're young," she said yesterday. "They have to go to work, so they don't have time for this."

When it snows as it has been snowing this week, Tambascia is out all day. Yesterday, she patiently traversed her driveway and front walk, as well as those of her neighbors, from 5 a.m. to 4 p.m., taking breaks only for coffee and lunch.

The retired school crossing guard took on the chore after her husband died in 1994. He, too, had shoveled out the neighbors. Now, she says, she talks to him while she works. Sometimes she asks him to make it stop snowing.

"It's not working," she said yesterday. "Mama mia, did we have snow!"

a cave built for two

2 teens arrested in snow fort standoff
January 27, 2005

Police arrested two Framingham High School students Tuesday for refusing to abandon a cave they had built in a pile of plowed snow near a parking lot in front of the school. A school official, concerned that the large snow cave might collapse on the pair, called police to remove the students after he said they were unresponsive to his requests to leave, said principal Ralph Olsen. Police arrived around 2:30 p.m. and arrested Jenna Schroder, 18, and Jason Osorio, 18, after they also refused police orders to leave. They were charged with disorderly conduct and trespassing, and were released on personal recognizance.

a cave built for two

2 teens arrested in snow fort standoff
January 27, 2005

Police arrested two Framingham High School students Tuesday for refusing to abandon a cave they had built in a pile of plowed snow near a parking lot in front of the school. A school official, concerned that the large snow cave might collapse on the pair, called police to remove the students after he said they were unresponsive to his requests to leave, said principal Ralph Olsen. Police arrived around 2:30 p.m. and arrested Jenna Schroder, 18, and Jason Osorio, 18, after they also refused police orders to leave. They were charged with disorderly conduct and trespassing, and were released on personal recognizance.

a cave built for two

2 teens arrested in snow fort standoff
January 27, 2005

Police arrested two Framingham High School students Tuesday for refusing to abandon a cave they had built in a pile of plowed snow near a parking lot in front of the school. A school official, concerned that the large snow cave might collapse on the pair, called police to remove the students after he said they were unresponsive to his requests to leave, said principal Ralph Olsen. Police arrived around 2:30 p.m. and arrested Jenna Schroder, 18, and Jason Osorio, 18, after they also refused police orders to leave. They were charged with disorderly conduct and trespassing, and were released on personal recognizance.

first the Pats..then the Sox..then the pats again ..and now..Just Boston

Boston sets a monthly snow record
By Jack Williams, USATODAY.com
BOSTON — The last thing Boston needed — another snowstorm — began early Wednesday and by evening had pushed the city to a new monthly snowfall record.

Snow plows roll across New England streets Wednesday morning as more snow falls.
By Bob Child, AP

The Boston National Weather Service office reported that the 5.4 inches of snow that fell on Wednesday brought the month's total to 43.1 inches. of snow. This tops of the old monthly record of 41.6 inches set in February 2003.

first the Pats..then the Sox..then the pats again ..and now..Just Boston

Boston sets a monthly snow record
By Jack Williams, USATODAY.com
BOSTON — The last thing Boston needed — another snowstorm — began early Wednesday and by evening had pushed the city to a new monthly snowfall record.

Snow plows roll across New England streets Wednesday morning as more snow falls.
By Bob Child, AP

The Boston National Weather Service office reported that the 5.4 inches of snow that fell on Wednesday brought the month's total to 43.1 inches. of snow. This tops of the old monthly record of 41.6 inches set in February 2003.

first the Pats..then the Sox..then the pats again ..and now..Just Boston

Boston sets a monthly snow record
By Jack Williams, USATODAY.com
BOSTON — The last thing Boston needed — another snowstorm — began early Wednesday and by evening had pushed the city to a new monthly snowfall record.

Snow plows roll across New England streets Wednesday morning as more snow falls.
By Bob Child, AP

The Boston National Weather Service office reported that the 5.4 inches of snow that fell on Wednesday brought the month's total to 43.1 inches. of snow. This tops of the old monthly record of 41.6 inches set in February 2003.

January 26, 2005

we don't need no stinking enviorment

US to open vast region for drilling in Southwest
New Mexico governor vows to fight decision
By Susan Montoya Bryan, Associated Press | January 26, 2005

ALBUQUERQUE -- Despite protests by the governor and environmentalists, the federal government has decided to open nearly all of New Mexico's vast Otero Mesa for exploratory drilling but vowed that the oil and gas industry won't have a ''free-for-all."

ADVERTISEMENT

The decision Monday by the Bureau of Land Management permanently will protect about 124,000 acres of the roughly 2 million-acre mesa, one of North America's largest remaining pieces of Chihuahuan desert grassland.

Governor Bill Richardson and environmentalists, including the New Mexico Wilderness Alliance and Denver-based Earthjustice, promised a court battle.

''The state is going to fight this with everything we've got," Richardson said.

we don't need no stinking enviorment

US to open vast region for drilling in Southwest
New Mexico governor vows to fight decision
By Susan Montoya Bryan, Associated Press | January 26, 2005

ALBUQUERQUE -- Despite protests by the governor and environmentalists, the federal government has decided to open nearly all of New Mexico's vast Otero Mesa for exploratory drilling but vowed that the oil and gas industry won't have a ''free-for-all."

ADVERTISEMENT

The decision Monday by the Bureau of Land Management permanently will protect about 124,000 acres of the roughly 2 million-acre mesa, one of North America's largest remaining pieces of Chihuahuan desert grassland.

Governor Bill Richardson and environmentalists, including the New Mexico Wilderness Alliance and Denver-based Earthjustice, promised a court battle.

''The state is going to fight this with everything we've got," Richardson said.

we don't need no stinking enviorment

US to open vast region for drilling in Southwest
New Mexico governor vows to fight decision
By Susan Montoya Bryan, Associated Press | January 26, 2005

ALBUQUERQUE -- Despite protests by the governor and environmentalists, the federal government has decided to open nearly all of New Mexico's vast Otero Mesa for exploratory drilling but vowed that the oil and gas industry won't have a ''free-for-all."

ADVERTISEMENT

The decision Monday by the Bureau of Land Management permanently will protect about 124,000 acres of the roughly 2 million-acre mesa, one of North America's largest remaining pieces of Chihuahuan desert grassland.

Governor Bill Richardson and environmentalists, including the New Mexico Wilderness Alliance and Denver-based Earthjustice, promised a court battle.

''The state is going to fight this with everything we've got," Richardson said.

from Groucho to you....Thanks Mike S.

The following are lyrics from a song in the 1933 Marx Brothers’ comedy "Duck
Soup" entitled "The Country’s Going to War."

Firefly: Then it’s war! Then it’s war! Gather the forces! Harness the
horses! Then it’s war!
Minister: Freedonia’s going to war!
General: Each native son will grab a gun.
Stenographer: And run away to war!
All: At last we’re going to…. Feet will beat along the street to… War! We’re
going to war!
Chicolini and Bob: At last the country’s going to war
All: It seems the country’s going to war.
Ministers: At last the country’s going to war.
All: We’re going to war!
Prosecutor: This is a fact we can’t ignore.
All: We’re going to war! This is a fact we can’t ignore! We’re going to war!
Firefly: In case you haven’t heard before. I think they think we’re going to
war. I think they think we’re going to war
All: We’re going to war!
Bob: I think they think we’re going to war
All: We’re going to war!
Chicolini: We’re going to war!
Guards: We’re going to war!

Among movie experts, "Duck Soup" is considered the Marx Brothers’ greatest
and funniest cinematic masterpiece. This classic comedy is a short (70
minutes) but cutting satire on nationalism and dictators, diplomacy and war,
international intrigue and espionage. When it was first released, the film
was both a critical and commercial failure. Audiences were taken aback by
such preposterous political disrespect, buffoonery, and cynicism at a time
of political crisis. In fact, Fascist Italian dictator Mussolini banned the
film in his country for mocking his regime. Fortunately, the film was
rediscovered by the generation of 1960s college students and many others.

from Groucho to you....Thanks Mike S.

The following are lyrics from a song in the 1933 Marx Brothers’ comedy "Duck
Soup" entitled "The Country’s Going to War."

Firefly: Then it’s war! Then it’s war! Gather the forces! Harness the
horses! Then it’s war!
Minister: Freedonia’s going to war!
General: Each native son will grab a gun.
Stenographer: And run away to war!
All: At last we’re going to…. Feet will beat along the street to… War! We’re
going to war!
Chicolini and Bob: At last the country’s going to war
All: It seems the country’s going to war.
Ministers: At last the country’s going to war.
All: We’re going to war!
Prosecutor: This is a fact we can’t ignore.
All: We’re going to war! This is a fact we can’t ignore! We’re going to war!
Firefly: In case you haven’t heard before. I think they think we’re going to
war. I think they think we’re going to war
All: We’re going to war!
Bob: I think they think we’re going to war
All: We’re going to war!
Chicolini: We’re going to war!
Guards: We’re going to war!

Among movie experts, "Duck Soup" is considered the Marx Brothers’ greatest
and funniest cinematic masterpiece. This classic comedy is a short (70
minutes) but cutting satire on nationalism and dictators, diplomacy and war,
international intrigue and espionage. When it was first released, the film
was both a critical and commercial failure. Audiences were taken aback by
such preposterous political disrespect, buffoonery, and cynicism at a time
of political crisis. In fact, Fascist Italian dictator Mussolini banned the
film in his country for mocking his regime. Fortunately, the film was
rediscovered by the generation of 1960s college students and many others.

from Groucho to you....Thanks Mike S.

The following are lyrics from a song in the 1933 Marx Brothers’ comedy "Duck
Soup" entitled "The Country’s Going to War."

Firefly: Then it’s war! Then it’s war! Gather the forces! Harness the
horses! Then it’s war!
Minister: Freedonia’s going to war!
General: Each native son will grab a gun.
Stenographer: And run away to war!
All: At last we’re going to…. Feet will beat along the street to… War! We’re
going to war!
Chicolini and Bob: At last the country’s going to war
All: It seems the country’s going to war.
Ministers: At last the country’s going to war.
All: We’re going to war!
Prosecutor: This is a fact we can’t ignore.
All: We’re going to war! This is a fact we can’t ignore! We’re going to war!
Firefly: In case you haven’t heard before. I think they think we’re going to
war. I think they think we’re going to war
All: We’re going to war!
Bob: I think they think we’re going to war
All: We’re going to war!
Chicolini: We’re going to war!
Guards: We’re going to war!

Among movie experts, "Duck Soup" is considered the Marx Brothers’ greatest
and funniest cinematic masterpiece. This classic comedy is a short (70
minutes) but cutting satire on nationalism and dictators, diplomacy and war,
international intrigue and espionage. When it was first released, the film
was both a critical and commercial failure. Audiences were taken aback by
such preposterous political disrespect, buffoonery, and cynicism at a time
of political crisis. In fact, Fascist Italian dictator Mussolini banned the
film in his country for mocking his regime. Fortunately, the film was
rediscovered by the generation of 1960s college students and many others.

and today's winner is............

Suspect wins one case then is arrested
Post-Dispatch
01/25/2005

ST. LOUIS

Suspect wins one case then is arrested

Lance A. Cole got mixed results in the federal courthouse Tuesday.

He won $2,500 in damages on a claim that a St. Louis police officer kicked him in the groin just two days after Cole accidentally shot himself in the genitals. But he got arrested as he left the courtroom.

A jury in U.S. District Court in St. Louis found that a police officer had used excessive force against Cole after an arrest in June 2002 and awarded the $2,500.

"It's a vindication for Lance Cole. And it's a victory for civil rights: they apply to prisoners in the St. Louis central lockup," said Cole's attorney, Michael George.

The case stemmed from an incident in June 2002 when Cole, 24, stashed a pistol in his pants and it went off. After Cole got surgery at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, he was arrested on a parole violation. In his suit, he claimed that two days after the shooting, an officer kicked him in the groin during a scuffle at police headquarters.

and today's winner is............

Suspect wins one case then is arrested
Post-Dispatch
01/25/2005

ST. LOUIS

Suspect wins one case then is arrested

Lance A. Cole got mixed results in the federal courthouse Tuesday.

He won $2,500 in damages on a claim that a St. Louis police officer kicked him in the groin just two days after Cole accidentally shot himself in the genitals. But he got arrested as he left the courtroom.

A jury in U.S. District Court in St. Louis found that a police officer had used excessive force against Cole after an arrest in June 2002 and awarded the $2,500.

"It's a vindication for Lance Cole. And it's a victory for civil rights: they apply to prisoners in the St. Louis central lockup," said Cole's attorney, Michael George.

The case stemmed from an incident in June 2002 when Cole, 24, stashed a pistol in his pants and it went off. After Cole got surgery at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, he was arrested on a parole violation. In his suit, he claimed that two days after the shooting, an officer kicked him in the groin during a scuffle at police headquarters.

and today's winner is............

Suspect wins one case then is arrested
Post-Dispatch
01/25/2005

ST. LOUIS

Suspect wins one case then is arrested

Lance A. Cole got mixed results in the federal courthouse Tuesday.

He won $2,500 in damages on a claim that a St. Louis police officer kicked him in the groin just two days after Cole accidentally shot himself in the genitals. But he got arrested as he left the courtroom.

A jury in U.S. District Court in St. Louis found that a police officer had used excessive force against Cole after an arrest in June 2002 and awarded the $2,500.

"It's a vindication for Lance Cole. And it's a victory for civil rights: they apply to prisoners in the St. Louis central lockup," said Cole's attorney, Michael George.

The case stemmed from an incident in June 2002 when Cole, 24, stashed a pistol in his pants and it went off. After Cole got surgery at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, he was arrested on a parole violation. In his suit, he claimed that two days after the shooting, an officer kicked him in the groin during a scuffle at police headquarters.

and so it goes

Deadliest day for U.S. in Iraq war
31 Marines killed in chopper crash; 5 troops in other incidents
Wednesday, January 26, 2005 Posted: 10:18 AM EST (1518 GMT)

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Thirty-one Marines were killed in a helicopter crash near Iraq's border with Jordan, bringing the number of U.S. troops killed Wednesday to 36 -- the deadliest day for U.S. forces since the start of the war in Iraq.

Four U.S. Marines were killed during combat in Iraq's Al-Anbar province, and a U.S. soldier died when insurgents attacked a combat patrol north of Baghdad, according to the U.S. military.

The cause of the chopper crash was not immediately known and is being investigated, according to the military.

Wednesday's death toll surpassed the 31 U.S. forces killed on March 23, 2003 -- four days after the start of the war in Iraq. Twenty-nine of them died in combat that day.

Wednesday's incidents brought the U.S. death toll in the war to 1,417.

and so it goes

Deadliest day for U.S. in Iraq war
31 Marines killed in chopper crash; 5 troops in other incidents
Wednesday, January 26, 2005 Posted: 10:18 AM EST (1518 GMT)

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Thirty-one Marines were killed in a helicopter crash near Iraq's border with Jordan, bringing the number of U.S. troops killed Wednesday to 36 -- the deadliest day for U.S. forces since the start of the war in Iraq.

Four U.S. Marines were killed during combat in Iraq's Al-Anbar province, and a U.S. soldier died when insurgents attacked a combat patrol north of Baghdad, according to the U.S. military.

The cause of the chopper crash was not immediately known and is being investigated, according to the military.

Wednesday's death toll surpassed the 31 U.S. forces killed on March 23, 2003 -- four days after the start of the war in Iraq. Twenty-nine of them died in combat that day.

Wednesday's incidents brought the U.S. death toll in the war to 1,417.

and so it goes

Deadliest day for U.S. in Iraq war
31 Marines killed in chopper crash; 5 troops in other incidents
Wednesday, January 26, 2005 Posted: 10:18 AM EST (1518 GMT)

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Thirty-one Marines were killed in a helicopter crash near Iraq's border with Jordan, bringing the number of U.S. troops killed Wednesday to 36 -- the deadliest day for U.S. forces since the start of the war in Iraq.

Four U.S. Marines were killed during combat in Iraq's Al-Anbar province, and a U.S. soldier died when insurgents attacked a combat patrol north of Baghdad, according to the U.S. military.

The cause of the chopper crash was not immediately known and is being investigated, according to the military.

Wednesday's death toll surpassed the 31 U.S. forces killed on March 23, 2003 -- four days after the start of the war in Iraq. Twenty-nine of them died in combat that day.

Wednesday's incidents brought the U.S. death toll in the war to 1,417.

but Maaaaaaaaaaaa

Weiner heckled by his own mom


BY MAGGIE HABERMAN
DAILY NEWS CITY HALL BUREAU

Anthony Weiner got a public reminder yesterday that "Mother knows best."
As the Democratic mayoral hopeful blasted Mayor Bloomberg's educational policies yesterday, he was quietly corrected by his own mom.

After Weiner's first major education speech, the congressman told a West Side Chamber of Commerce breakfast that music, arts and language programs have been "decimated" under Bloomberg.

"You basically have one choice in school now in terms of a second language and that's Spanish," said Weiner (D-Queens, Brooklyn), a public school alum.

But his mom, Fran, a retired teacher whom he praised earlier, informed him that Latin is still taught in some schools.

After a back-and-forth, Weiner joked: "Please. I can't be heckled by my own mother."

Weiner criticized Bloomberg's top-down reshuffling of the school system, saying teachers deserve more autonomy and bigger salaries.

Weiner admitted Bloomberg recently called for a big boost in vocational training, but Weiner said a lack of emphasis on those programs has hurt kids.

He also criticized the disciplinary system, saying it can take 105 days to suspend a student from school.

"Anthony Weiner's education speech today was all politics and loaded with inaccuracies," said Bloomberg spokesman Robert Lawson.

City Hall officials singled out Weiner's claim that the mayor's Leadership Academy to teach principals is spending $250,000 per graduate.

Insiders said the real amount is about $150,000 - all of it paid for by private funds.

but Maaaaaaaaaaaa

Weiner heckled by his own mom


BY MAGGIE HABERMAN
DAILY NEWS CITY HALL BUREAU

Anthony Weiner got a public reminder yesterday that "Mother knows best."
As the Democratic mayoral hopeful blasted Mayor Bloomberg's educational policies yesterday, he was quietly corrected by his own mom.

After Weiner's first major education speech, the congressman told a West Side Chamber of Commerce breakfast that music, arts and language programs have been "decimated" under Bloomberg.

"You basically have one choice in school now in terms of a second language and that's Spanish," said Weiner (D-Queens, Brooklyn), a public school alum.

But his mom, Fran, a retired teacher whom he praised earlier, informed him that Latin is still taught in some schools.

After a back-and-forth, Weiner joked: "Please. I can't be heckled by my own mother."

Weiner criticized Bloomberg's top-down reshuffling of the school system, saying teachers deserve more autonomy and bigger salaries.

Weiner admitted Bloomberg recently called for a big boost in vocational training, but Weiner said a lack of emphasis on those programs has hurt kids.

He also criticized the disciplinary system, saying it can take 105 days to suspend a student from school.

"Anthony Weiner's education speech today was all politics and loaded with inaccuracies," said Bloomberg spokesman Robert Lawson.

City Hall officials singled out Weiner's claim that the mayor's Leadership Academy to teach principals is spending $250,000 per graduate.

Insiders said the real amount is about $150,000 - all of it paid for by private funds.

but Maaaaaaaaaaaa

Weiner heckled by his own mom


BY MAGGIE HABERMAN
DAILY NEWS CITY HALL BUREAU

Anthony Weiner got a public reminder yesterday that "Mother knows best."
As the Democratic mayoral hopeful blasted Mayor Bloomberg's educational policies yesterday, he was quietly corrected by his own mom.

After Weiner's first major education speech, the congressman told a West Side Chamber of Commerce breakfast that music, arts and language programs have been "decimated" under Bloomberg.

"You basically have one choice in school now in terms of a second language and that's Spanish," said Weiner (D-Queens, Brooklyn), a public school alum.

But his mom, Fran, a retired teacher whom he praised earlier, informed him that Latin is still taught in some schools.

After a back-and-forth, Weiner joked: "Please. I can't be heckled by my own mother."

Weiner criticized Bloomberg's top-down reshuffling of the school system, saying teachers deserve more autonomy and bigger salaries.

Weiner admitted Bloomberg recently called for a big boost in vocational training, but Weiner said a lack of emphasis on those programs has hurt kids.

He also criticized the disciplinary system, saying it can take 105 days to suspend a student from school.

"Anthony Weiner's education speech today was all politics and loaded with inaccuracies," said Bloomberg spokesman Robert Lawson.

City Hall officials singled out Weiner's claim that the mayor's Leadership Academy to teach principals is spending $250,000 per graduate.

Insiders said the real amount is about $150,000 - all of it paid for by private funds.

They are 9 and 10 years old for crying out loud

Children Charged With Felonies Over Violent Drawings

POSTED: 5:00 am MST January 26, 2005

OCALA, Fla. -- Two boys, ages 9 and 10, were charged with felonies and taken away from school in handcuffs, accused of making violent drawings of stick figures.

Should these children face felony charges for their violent drawings?
No, they are children.
No, nobody should face charges for a drawing.
Yes, a felony is appropriate for this type of drawing.

The boys were arrested Monday on charges of making a written threat to kill or harm another person, a second-degree felony. The special education students used pencil and red crayon to draw primitive stick figure scenes on scrap paper that showed a 10-year-old classmate being stabbed and hung, police said.

"The officer found they were drawing these pictures for the sole purpose of intimidating and scaring the victim," said Ocala Police Sgt. Russ Kern.

They are 9 and 10 years old for crying out loud

Children Charged With Felonies Over Violent Drawings

POSTED: 5:00 am MST January 26, 2005

OCALA, Fla. -- Two boys, ages 9 and 10, were charged with felonies and taken away from school in handcuffs, accused of making violent drawings of stick figures.

Should these children face felony charges for their violent drawings?
No, they are children.
No, nobody should face charges for a drawing.
Yes, a felony is appropriate for this type of drawing.

The boys were arrested Monday on charges of making a written threat to kill or harm another person, a second-degree felony. The special education students used pencil and red crayon to draw primitive stick figure scenes on scrap paper that showed a 10-year-old classmate being stabbed and hung, police said.

"The officer found they were drawing these pictures for the sole purpose of intimidating and scaring the victim," said Ocala Police Sgt. Russ Kern.

They are 9 and 10 years old for crying out loud

Children Charged With Felonies Over Violent Drawings

POSTED: 5:00 am MST January 26, 2005

OCALA, Fla. -- Two boys, ages 9 and 10, were charged with felonies and taken away from school in handcuffs, accused of making violent drawings of stick figures.

Should these children face felony charges for their violent drawings?
No, they are children.
No, nobody should face charges for a drawing.
Yes, a felony is appropriate for this type of drawing.

The boys were arrested Monday on charges of making a written threat to kill or harm another person, a second-degree felony. The special education students used pencil and red crayon to draw primitive stick figure scenes on scrap paper that showed a 10-year-old classmate being stabbed and hung, police said.

"The officer found they were drawing these pictures for the sole purpose of intimidating and scaring the victim," said Ocala Police Sgt. Russ Kern.

Just say...no , wait a minute

US drops Afghanistan opium spraying plans
January 26, 2005

Facing opposition from Afghan President Hamid Karzai, the United States has set aside plans to use spray planes to kill opium crops in Afghanistan, the world's largest drug producing country. Karzai's opposition to spraying has frustrated some US officials who doubt that the vast amount of opium produced in Afghanistan can be significantly reduced without spraying. Opium is the raw material for heroin. The UN says Afghanistan's drug trade has funded terrorists. (AP)

Just say...no , wait a minute

US drops Afghanistan opium spraying plans
January 26, 2005

Facing opposition from Afghan President Hamid Karzai, the United States has set aside plans to use spray planes to kill opium crops in Afghanistan, the world's largest drug producing country. Karzai's opposition to spraying has frustrated some US officials who doubt that the vast amount of opium produced in Afghanistan can be significantly reduced without spraying. Opium is the raw material for heroin. The UN says Afghanistan's drug trade has funded terrorists. (AP)

Just say...no , wait a minute

US drops Afghanistan opium spraying plans
January 26, 2005

Facing opposition from Afghan President Hamid Karzai, the United States has set aside plans to use spray planes to kill opium crops in Afghanistan, the world's largest drug producing country. Karzai's opposition to spraying has frustrated some US officials who doubt that the vast amount of opium produced in Afghanistan can be significantly reduced without spraying. Opium is the raw material for heroin. The UN says Afghanistan's drug trade has funded terrorists. (AP)

and $300Billion for Iraq

State gets $60.3m to curb homelessness
January 26, 2005

Massachusetts received $60.3 million in federal grants yesterday to curb homelessness, part of $1.4 billion being distributed by the Department of Housing and Urban Development. This year's round of grants to the Bay State represent a $5.9 million increase from last year's $54.4 million given to fund permanent housing and transitional programs for the homeless. The money also will help fund the construction and maintenance of emergency shelters, but the focus this year is on finding permanent housing. Massachusetts ranked seventh for the most funding across the country, said Joe Finn, executive director of Massachusetts Housing and Shelter Alliance.

and $300Billion for Iraq

State gets $60.3m to curb homelessness
January 26, 2005

Massachusetts received $60.3 million in federal grants yesterday to curb homelessness, part of $1.4 billion being distributed by the Department of Housing and Urban Development. This year's round of grants to the Bay State represent a $5.9 million increase from last year's $54.4 million given to fund permanent housing and transitional programs for the homeless. The money also will help fund the construction and maintenance of emergency shelters, but the focus this year is on finding permanent housing. Massachusetts ranked seventh for the most funding across the country, said Joe Finn, executive director of Massachusetts Housing and Shelter Alliance.

and $300Billion for Iraq

State gets $60.3m to curb homelessness
January 26, 2005

Massachusetts received $60.3 million in federal grants yesterday to curb homelessness, part of $1.4 billion being distributed by the Department of Housing and Urban Development. This year's round of grants to the Bay State represent a $5.9 million increase from last year's $54.4 million given to fund permanent housing and transitional programs for the homeless. The money also will help fund the construction and maintenance of emergency shelters, but the focus this year is on finding permanent housing. Massachusetts ranked seventh for the most funding across the country, said Joe Finn, executive director of Massachusetts Housing and Shelter Alliance.

god bless

President's words, deeds don't jibe
January 26, 2005

IN ''SAME man, different president" (op ed, Jan. 20), Jeff Jacoby says George W. Bush wants to overhaul Social Security.

Well in his inaugural speech, or sermon as some call it, he hardly mentioned domestic issues.

Jacoby says Bush has an agenda to overhaul the Middle East. Well, he hasn't been able to quell the insurgents in Iraq. And in his inaugural sermon, Mr. Bush says he wants to fight tyranny wherever it occurs in the world.

That's a pretty big order . . . how does he plan to do it? He didn't get into specifics and, come to think of it, he never does.

Sounds like reinventing the Crusades.

god bless

President's words, deeds don't jibe
January 26, 2005

IN ''SAME man, different president" (op ed, Jan. 20), Jeff Jacoby says George W. Bush wants to overhaul Social Security.

Well in his inaugural speech, or sermon as some call it, he hardly mentioned domestic issues.

Jacoby says Bush has an agenda to overhaul the Middle East. Well, he hasn't been able to quell the insurgents in Iraq. And in his inaugural sermon, Mr. Bush says he wants to fight tyranny wherever it occurs in the world.

That's a pretty big order . . . how does he plan to do it? He didn't get into specifics and, come to think of it, he never does.

Sounds like reinventing the Crusades.

god bless

President's words, deeds don't jibe
January 26, 2005

IN ''SAME man, different president" (op ed, Jan. 20), Jeff Jacoby says George W. Bush wants to overhaul Social Security.

Well in his inaugural speech, or sermon as some call it, he hardly mentioned domestic issues.

Jacoby says Bush has an agenda to overhaul the Middle East. Well, he hasn't been able to quell the insurgents in Iraq. And in his inaugural sermon, Mr. Bush says he wants to fight tyranny wherever it occurs in the world.

That's a pretty big order . . . how does he plan to do it? He didn't get into specifics and, come to think of it, he never does.

Sounds like reinventing the Crusades.

sad


From the rink, to the ring
Scandalous skater Tonya Harding tries to fight off her past in new arena
By Stan Grossfeld, Globe Staff | January 26, 2005

ESSINGTON, Pa. -- Tonya Harding has a migraine. She's been sick for months with bronchitis and the flu. Now she has to meet the press to promote her upcoming celebrity boxing match. Interview rules are set by the promoter and Harding's new manager, who is also her godmother. There are to be absolutely no questions about Nancy Kerrigan. A reporter from Philadelphia introduces himself, and his first question is about Kerrigan.

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"I'm going to stop you right there," says Harding. "That was 11 years ago."

Harding, 35, looks totally different from the 110-pound figure skater she once was. She still has the piercing blue eyes but her 5-foot-1-inch frame is bulked up more than her listed 125 pounds. Her biceps look like telephone poles and she is dressed in a black Everlast warmup suit. She is slated to box Brittney Drake, 25, of the Women's Extreme Wrestling Federation, whose website lists her as 5-6, 120 pounds. It will be Drake's boxing debut, and win, lose, or draw, she will be at her waitress job the next morning $1,000 richer. Harding's fee is undisclosed.

sad


From the rink, to the ring
Scandalous skater Tonya Harding tries to fight off her past in new arena
By Stan Grossfeld, Globe Staff | January 26, 2005

ESSINGTON, Pa. -- Tonya Harding has a migraine. She's been sick for months with bronchitis and the flu. Now she has to meet the press to promote her upcoming celebrity boxing match. Interview rules are set by the promoter and Harding's new manager, who is also her godmother. There are to be absolutely no questions about Nancy Kerrigan. A reporter from Philadelphia introduces himself, and his first question is about Kerrigan.

ADVERTISEMENT

"I'm going to stop you right there," says Harding. "That was 11 years ago."

Harding, 35, looks totally different from the 110-pound figure skater she once was. She still has the piercing blue eyes but her 5-foot-1-inch frame is bulked up more than her listed 125 pounds. Her biceps look like telephone poles and she is dressed in a black Everlast warmup suit. She is slated to box Brittney Drake, 25, of the Women's Extreme Wrestling Federation, whose website lists her as 5-6, 120 pounds. It will be Drake's boxing debut, and win, lose, or draw, she will be at her waitress job the next morning $1,000 richer. Harding's fee is undisclosed.

sad


From the rink, to the ring
Scandalous skater Tonya Harding tries to fight off her past in new arena
By Stan Grossfeld, Globe Staff | January 26, 2005

ESSINGTON, Pa. -- Tonya Harding has a migraine. She's been sick for months with bronchitis and the flu. Now she has to meet the press to promote her upcoming celebrity boxing match. Interview rules are set by the promoter and Harding's new manager, who is also her godmother. There are to be absolutely no questions about Nancy Kerrigan. A reporter from Philadelphia introduces himself, and his first question is about Kerrigan.

ADVERTISEMENT

"I'm going to stop you right there," says Harding. "That was 11 years ago."

Harding, 35, looks totally different from the 110-pound figure skater she once was. She still has the piercing blue eyes but her 5-foot-1-inch frame is bulked up more than her listed 125 pounds. Her biceps look like telephone poles and she is dressed in a black Everlast warmup suit. She is slated to box Brittney Drake, 25, of the Women's Extreme Wrestling Federation, whose website lists her as 5-6, 120 pounds. It will be Drake's boxing debut, and win, lose, or draw, she will be at her waitress job the next morning $1,000 richer. Harding's fee is undisclosed.

Tougher than dirt


A nice recovery by Brady
January 26, 2005

Patriots quarterback Tom Brady reportedly was very sick the night before he helped make the Pittsburgh Steelers look ill in the AFC Championship game.

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According to this week's Sports Illustrated, Brady had a 103-degree fever Saturday night and took intravenous fluids in his left -- non-throwing -- arm while battling chills in his hotel room.

Sunday, with the temperature at Pittsburgh's Heinz Field 11 degrees, Brady went 14 for 21 for 207 yards and threw for two touchdowns with no interceptions to lead New England to a 41-27 victory and its third Super Bowl appearance in four years.

The opposing signal-caller, Steelers rookie Ben Roethlisberger, said yesterday he broke a couple of toes on his right foot during the game.

Roethlisberger said he believes he was hurt while stumbling on a 13-yard run late in the first half, and he refused to blame the injury for his less-than stellar play

Tougher than dirt


A nice recovery by Brady
January 26, 2005

Patriots quarterback Tom Brady reportedly was very sick the night before he helped make the Pittsburgh Steelers look ill in the AFC Championship game.

ADVERTISEMENT

According to this week's Sports Illustrated, Brady had a 103-degree fever Saturday night and took intravenous fluids in his left -- non-throwing -- arm while battling chills in his hotel room.

Sunday, with the temperature at Pittsburgh's Heinz Field 11 degrees, Brady went 14 for 21 for 207 yards and threw for two touchdowns with no interceptions to lead New England to a 41-27 victory and its third Super Bowl appearance in four years.

The opposing signal-caller, Steelers rookie Ben Roethlisberger, said yesterday he broke a couple of toes on his right foot during the game.

Roethlisberger said he believes he was hurt while stumbling on a 13-yard run late in the first half, and he refused to blame the injury for his less-than stellar play

Tougher than dirt


A nice recovery by Brady
January 26, 2005

Patriots quarterback Tom Brady reportedly was very sick the night before he helped make the Pittsburgh Steelers look ill in the AFC Championship game.

ADVERTISEMENT

According to this week's Sports Illustrated, Brady had a 103-degree fever Saturday night and took intravenous fluids in his left -- non-throwing -- arm while battling chills in his hotel room.

Sunday, with the temperature at Pittsburgh's Heinz Field 11 degrees, Brady went 14 for 21 for 207 yards and threw for two touchdowns with no interceptions to lead New England to a 41-27 victory and its third Super Bowl appearance in four years.

The opposing signal-caller, Steelers rookie Ben Roethlisberger, said yesterday he broke a couple of toes on his right foot during the game.

Roethlisberger said he believes he was hurt while stumbling on a 13-yard run late in the first half, and he refused to blame the injury for his less-than stellar play

January 21, 2005

the ultimate bummer

Here's a movie idea: diehard Red Sox fan falls into a coma before the 2004 playoffs, spends the next four weeks fighting for his life, then regains his senses after the World Series. He survives ... only he feels ripped off, because as millions of Sox fans say, "I saw them win in my lifetime," this poor guy is the one who didn't see anything.


Never mind. It's too improbable, right?



To The Coma Guy, this moment still seems like a dream.
Meet Steven Manganello, known from this day forward in Red Sox history as The Coma Guy. Growing up in Maine, his family followed the Sox because his grandfather did, one more diehard who ended up with these dates on his tombstone: 1917-2003. Ouch.


Last September, Steven scheduled a Japan vacation that would get him home two days before the playoffs began. On Oct. 1, the final night of his trip, he crossed a street in Tokyo and ... well, this is where it gets hazy. That tends to happen when you're pancaked by a taxi travelling at an estimated 50 mph. Steven spent the next four weeks in a Tokyo hospital, battling a potentially fatal brain hemorrhage, not to mention paralysis, a punctured lung and other critical injuries. The collision was so violent, he didn't just have five broken ribs, one of them had actually flipped around inside his body. Steven's head was so swollen that when his brother, Anthony, showed up the next day, he swears it was "three times its normal size."


In the movies, people spring out of a coma like Adrian in Rocky II, as if nothing happened. In real life, there's a tube jammed down your throat and enough drugs pump through your veins to bring Keith Richards to his knees. For 17 days Steven was a blank slate. Sometimes he woke for a few minutes, but his short-term memory was demolished. That didn't stop Anthony from constantly feeding him playoff updates, hoping the positive news would stimulate something in his brother. When the Sox dropped those first three to the Yanks, Anthony even lied, pretending they were winning. Anything to keep his brother going. When Steven heard the "good" news, he'd squeeze his brother's hand -- it was all he could do. A few minutes later, as Anthony puts it, "He'd be on vacation again."


When the Yankees orchestrated the Greatest Choke in Sports History, a semiconscious Steven was still disoriented (channeling Grady Little of the previous October). When the Sox won it all and his friends and family called to share the moment, he understood ... for about five minutes. Then he forgot what happened. It was like SNL's old Mr. Short-Term Memory sketch. As Steven says, "I could remember my childhood phone number, but I couldn't remember somebody's name." It wasn't until he flew home to California in November that his brain started to work again. By Thanksgiving, Steven was well enough to fully grasp two things: "Holy crap, I almost died!" and "Holy crap, the Red Sox won the World Series!"


Problem is, now he feels left out. He only vaguely remembers a buddy calling after the ALCS, a Yankee fan saying he was half-rooting for Boston for Steven's sake. That made him feel good. He remembers watching highlights of two Johnny Damon homers on Japanese television, a happy, if hazy, memory. He knows he absorbed his brother's updates and believes they helped him ... but he remembers nothing of them. And he is proud the Sox won. Still, Steven says, "I get hit by a car and boom, they win the Series. If you loved the Red Sox and waited your whole life for this, how would you feel?" In case you don't know, he'll tell you. "It's brutal."


Should any of this matter to a guy who has undergone a near-death experience, especially if he's still slurring his speech and the right side of his body isn't yet working right? "Hey, the guy watched every Sox game he could his whole life," Anthony explains. "When they won the Series, back home we were buying shots, bottles of champagne, it was crazy. He shoulda been there. It isn't fair."


Doctors expect Steven to be fully recovered by the summer. That, in itself, is practically a miracle ... right along the lines of the Red Sox winning the Series. He plans to watch the DVDs and tapes of the Yankees games some time this winter, although part of him is afraid to. The thrill of the ride may just make the after-the-fact experience too bittersweet.


"My grandfather died having never seen them win," Steven says. "I had my chance, but I didn't see it either. Even though it happened, even though we ended the Curse, I feel I missed something big."


For The Coma Guy, it's 87 years and counting.

the ultimate bummer

Here's a movie idea: diehard Red Sox fan falls into a coma before the 2004 playoffs, spends the next four weeks fighting for his life, then regains his senses after the World Series. He survives ... only he feels ripped off, because as millions of Sox fans say, "I saw them win in my lifetime," this poor guy is the one who didn't see anything.


Never mind. It's too improbable, right?



To The Coma Guy, this moment still seems like a dream.
Meet Steven Manganello, known from this day forward in Red Sox history as The Coma Guy. Growing up in Maine, his family followed the Sox because his grandfather did, one more diehard who ended up with these dates on his tombstone: 1917-2003. Ouch.


Last September, Steven scheduled a Japan vacation that would get him home two days before the playoffs began. On Oct. 1, the final night of his trip, he crossed a street in Tokyo and ... well, this is where it gets hazy. That tends to happen when you're pancaked by a taxi travelling at an estimated 50 mph. Steven spent the next four weeks in a Tokyo hospital, battling a potentially fatal brain hemorrhage, not to mention paralysis, a punctured lung and other critical injuries. The collision was so violent, he didn't just have five broken ribs, one of them had actually flipped around inside his body. Steven's head was so swollen that when his brother, Anthony, showed up the next day, he swears it was "three times its normal size."


In the movies, people spring out of a coma like Adrian in Rocky II, as if nothing happened. In real life, there's a tube jammed down your throat and enough drugs pump through your veins to bring Keith Richards to his knees. For 17 days Steven was a blank slate. Sometimes he woke for a few minutes, but his short-term memory was demolished. That didn't stop Anthony from constantly feeding him playoff updates, hoping the positive news would stimulate something in his brother. When the Sox dropped those first three to the Yanks, Anthony even lied, pretending they were winning. Anything to keep his brother going. When Steven heard the "good" news, he'd squeeze his brother's hand -- it was all he could do. A few minutes later, as Anthony puts it, "He'd be on vacation again."


When the Yankees orchestrated the Greatest Choke in Sports History, a semiconscious Steven was still disoriented (channeling Grady Little of the previous October). When the Sox won it all and his friends and family called to share the moment, he understood ... for about five minutes. Then he forgot what happened. It was like SNL's old Mr. Short-Term Memory sketch. As Steven says, "I could remember my childhood phone number, but I couldn't remember somebody's name." It wasn't until he flew home to California in November that his brain started to work again. By Thanksgiving, Steven was well enough to fully grasp two things: "Holy crap, I almost died!" and "Holy crap, the Red Sox won the World Series!"


Problem is, now he feels left out. He only vaguely remembers a buddy calling after the ALCS, a Yankee fan saying he was half-rooting for Boston for Steven's sake. That made him feel good. He remembers watching highlights of two Johnny Damon homers on Japanese television, a happy, if hazy, memory. He knows he absorbed his brother's updates and believes they helped him ... but he remembers nothing of them. And he is proud the Sox won. Still, Steven says, "I get hit by a car and boom, they win the Series. If you loved the Red Sox and waited your whole life for this, how would you feel?" In case you don't know, he'll tell you. "It's brutal."


Should any of this matter to a guy who has undergone a near-death experience, especially if he's still slurring his speech and the right side of his body isn't yet working right? "Hey, the guy watched every Sox game he could his whole life," Anthony explains. "When they won the Series, back home we were buying shots, bottles of champagne, it was crazy. He shoulda been there. It isn't fair."


Doctors expect Steven to be fully recovered by the summer. That, in itself, is practically a miracle ... right along the lines of the Red Sox winning the Series. He plans to watch the DVDs and tapes of the Yankees games some time this winter, although part of him is afraid to. The thrill of the ride may just make the after-the-fact experience too bittersweet.


"My grandfather died having never seen them win," Steven says. "I had my chance, but I didn't see it either. Even though it happened, even though we ended the Curse, I feel I missed something big."


For The Coma Guy, it's 87 years and counting.

the ultimate bummer

Here's a movie idea: diehard Red Sox fan falls into a coma before the 2004 playoffs, spends the next four weeks fighting for his life, then regains his senses after the World Series. He survives ... only he feels ripped off, because as millions of Sox fans say, "I saw them win in my lifetime," this poor guy is the one who didn't see anything.


Never mind. It's too improbable, right?



To The Coma Guy, this moment still seems like a dream.
Meet Steven Manganello, known from this day forward in Red Sox history as The Coma Guy. Growing up in Maine, his family followed the Sox because his grandfather did, one more diehard who ended up with these dates on his tombstone: 1917-2003. Ouch.


Last September, Steven scheduled a Japan vacation that would get him home two days before the playoffs began. On Oct. 1, the final night of his trip, he crossed a street in Tokyo and ... well, this is where it gets hazy. That tends to happen when you're pancaked by a taxi travelling at an estimated 50 mph. Steven spent the next four weeks in a Tokyo hospital, battling a potentially fatal brain hemorrhage, not to mention paralysis, a punctured lung and other critical injuries. The collision was so violent, he didn't just have five broken ribs, one of them had actually flipped around inside his body. Steven's head was so swollen that when his brother, Anthony, showed up the next day, he swears it was "three times its normal size."


In the movies, people spring out of a coma like Adrian in Rocky II, as if nothing happened. In real life, there's a tube jammed down your throat and enough drugs pump through your veins to bring Keith Richards to his knees. For 17 days Steven was a blank slate. Sometimes he woke for a few minutes, but his short-term memory was demolished. That didn't stop Anthony from constantly feeding him playoff updates, hoping the positive news would stimulate something in his brother. When the Sox dropped those first three to the Yanks, Anthony even lied, pretending they were winning. Anything to keep his brother going. When Steven heard the "good" news, he'd squeeze his brother's hand -- it was all he could do. A few minutes later, as Anthony puts it, "He'd be on vacation again."


When the Yankees orchestrated the Greatest Choke in Sports History, a semiconscious Steven was still disoriented (channeling Grady Little of the previous October). When the Sox won it all and his friends and family called to share the moment, he understood ... for about five minutes. Then he forgot what happened. It was like SNL's old Mr. Short-Term Memory sketch. As Steven says, "I could remember my childhood phone number, but I couldn't remember somebody's name." It wasn't until he flew home to California in November that his brain started to work again. By Thanksgiving, Steven was well enough to fully grasp two things: "Holy crap, I almost died!" and "Holy crap, the Red Sox won the World Series!"


Problem is, now he feels left out. He only vaguely remembers a buddy calling after the ALCS, a Yankee fan saying he was half-rooting for Boston for Steven's sake. That made him feel good. He remembers watching highlights of two Johnny Damon homers on Japanese television, a happy, if hazy, memory. He knows he absorbed his brother's updates and believes they helped him ... but he remembers nothing of them. And he is proud the Sox won. Still, Steven says, "I get hit by a car and boom, they win the Series. If you loved the Red Sox and waited your whole life for this, how would you feel?" In case you don't know, he'll tell you. "It's brutal."


Should any of this matter to a guy who has undergone a near-death experience, especially if he's still slurring his speech and the right side of his body isn't yet working right? "Hey, the guy watched every Sox game he could his whole life," Anthony explains. "When they won the Series, back home we were buying shots, bottles of champagne, it was crazy. He shoulda been there. It isn't fair."


Doctors expect Steven to be fully recovered by the summer. That, in itself, is practically a miracle ... right along the lines of the Red Sox winning the Series. He plans to watch the DVDs and tapes of the Yankees games some time this winter, although part of him is afraid to. The thrill of the ride may just make the after-the-fact experience too bittersweet.


"My grandfather died having never seen them win," Steven says. "I had my chance, but I didn't see it either. Even though it happened, even though we ended the Curse, I feel I missed something big."


For The Coma Guy, it's 87 years and counting.

oh come on....it was only 1 inch

RALEIGH, N.C. - A surprise 1-inch snow that turned to ice on frigid roads crippled North Carolina’s capital, trapping motorists in epic traffic jams and stranding some 3,000 pupils overnight at schools. The governor urged people to stay home Thursday while crews clean things up.

Highways were clogged with desperate drivers whose commutes Wednesday stretched to as long as eight hours. Law officers tallied about 1,000 accidents in the Raleigh-Durham area, but there were no reports of fatalities.

oh come on....it was only 1 inch

RALEIGH, N.C. - A surprise 1-inch snow that turned to ice on frigid roads crippled North Carolina’s capital, trapping motorists in epic traffic jams and stranding some 3,000 pupils overnight at schools. The governor urged people to stay home Thursday while crews clean things up.

Highways were clogged with desperate drivers whose commutes Wednesday stretched to as long as eight hours. Law officers tallied about 1,000 accidents in the Raleigh-Durham area, but there were no reports of fatalities.

oh come on....it was only 1 inch

RALEIGH, N.C. - A surprise 1-inch snow that turned to ice on frigid roads crippled North Carolina’s capital, trapping motorists in epic traffic jams and stranding some 3,000 pupils overnight at schools. The governor urged people to stay home Thursday while crews clean things up.

Highways were clogged with desperate drivers whose commutes Wednesday stretched to as long as eight hours. Law officers tallied about 1,000 accidents in the Raleigh-Durham area, but there were no reports of fatalities.

okay how stupid was this guy

110 Pounds Of Highly Potent Marijuana Seized In Traffic Stop
Wyoming Haul Valued At $880,000

POSTED: 11:09 am MST January 20, 2005

A Washington state man faces drug charges after his arrest in Wyoming for allegedly transporting 110 pounds of high-quality marijuana.

Gabriel Kaguras, 26, of Monroe, was stopped by a Wyoming Highway Patrol trooper about two miles west of Moorcroft on Interstate 90 after he failed to signal a lane change.

okay how stupid was this guy

110 Pounds Of Highly Potent Marijuana Seized In Traffic Stop
Wyoming Haul Valued At $880,000

POSTED: 11:09 am MST January 20, 2005

A Washington state man faces drug charges after his arrest in Wyoming for allegedly transporting 110 pounds of high-quality marijuana.

Gabriel Kaguras, 26, of Monroe, was stopped by a Wyoming Highway Patrol trooper about two miles west of Moorcroft on Interstate 90 after he failed to signal a lane change.

okay how stupid was this guy

110 Pounds Of Highly Potent Marijuana Seized In Traffic Stop
Wyoming Haul Valued At $880,000

POSTED: 11:09 am MST January 20, 2005

A Washington state man faces drug charges after his arrest in Wyoming for allegedly transporting 110 pounds of high-quality marijuana.

Gabriel Kaguras, 26, of Monroe, was stopped by a Wyoming Highway Patrol trooper about two miles west of Moorcroft on Interstate 90 after he failed to signal a lane change.

oh come on

Wis. Student Sues Over Summer Homework

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Printer friendly format



By RYAN NAKASHIMA
Associated Press Writer

January 20, 2005, 10:20 PM EST


MILWAUKEE -- Peer Larson was days away from a dream camp counselor job last June when his new high school math teacher dropped a sheaf of assignments on his desk that turned his summer of fun into a headache.

One of 30 staffers who handled 500 campers six days a week, the 17-year-old was hard pressed to finish the three pre-calculus assignments for his honors math class at Whitnall High School -- one of which was 16 pages long. They had to be mailed in three installments over the summer break.

"It didn't completely ruin my summer, but it did give me a lot of undue stress both at home and at work," Larson, a high school junior, told The Associated Press Thursday. "I just didn't have the energy or the time for it."

Larson and his father, unhappy with the response of school officials to their complaint of an unfair workload, have filed a lawsuit in Milwaukee County Circuit Court seeking to bar mandatory homework over the summer break in the Whitnall district and throughout Wisconsin.

They argue that school officials have no authority to make students who aren't in school in the summer do homework and then grade them on it, because the required 180-day school year is over.

oh come on

Wis. Student Sues Over Summer Homework

Email this story

Printer friendly format



By RYAN NAKASHIMA
Associated Press Writer

January 20, 2005, 10:20 PM EST


MILWAUKEE -- Peer Larson was days away from a dream camp counselor job last June when his new high school math teacher dropped a sheaf of assignments on his desk that turned his summer of fun into a headache.

One of 30 staffers who handled 500 campers six days a week, the 17-year-old was hard pressed to finish the three pre-calculus assignments for his honors math class at Whitnall High School -- one of which was 16 pages long. They had to be mailed in three installments over the summer break.

"It didn't completely ruin my summer, but it did give me a lot of undue stress both at home and at work," Larson, a high school junior, told The Associated Press Thursday. "I just didn't have the energy or the time for it."

Larson and his father, unhappy with the response of school officials to their complaint of an unfair workload, have filed a lawsuit in Milwaukee County Circuit Court seeking to bar mandatory homework over the summer break in the Whitnall district and throughout Wisconsin.

They argue that school officials have no authority to make students who aren't in school in the summer do homework and then grade them on it, because the required 180-day school year is over.

oh come on

Wis. Student Sues Over Summer Homework

Email this story

Printer friendly format



By RYAN NAKASHIMA
Associated Press Writer

January 20, 2005, 10:20 PM EST


MILWAUKEE -- Peer Larson was days away from a dream camp counselor job last June when his new high school math teacher dropped a sheaf of assignments on his desk that turned his summer of fun into a headache.

One of 30 staffers who handled 500 campers six days a week, the 17-year-old was hard pressed to finish the three pre-calculus assignments for his honors math class at Whitnall High School -- one of which was 16 pages long. They had to be mailed in three installments over the summer break.

"It didn't completely ruin my summer, but it did give me a lot of undue stress both at home and at work," Larson, a high school junior, told The Associated Press Thursday. "I just didn't have the energy or the time for it."

Larson and his father, unhappy with the response of school officials to their complaint of an unfair workload, have filed a lawsuit in Milwaukee County Circuit Court seeking to bar mandatory homework over the summer break in the Whitnall district and throughout Wisconsin.

They argue that school officials have no authority to make students who aren't in school in the summer do homework and then grade them on it, because the required 180-day school year is over.

et tu sponge bob

On the heels of electoral victories to bar same-sex marriage, some influential conservative Christian groups are turning their attention to a new target: the cartoon character SpongeBob SquarePants.

"Does anybody here know SpongeBob?" Dr James Dobson, founder of Focus on the Family, asked guests on Tuesday at a black-tie dinner for members of Congress and political allies.

et tu sponge bob

On the heels of electoral victories to bar same-sex marriage, some influential conservative Christian groups are turning their attention to a new target: the cartoon character SpongeBob SquarePants.

"Does anybody here know SpongeBob?" Dr James Dobson, founder of Focus on the Family, asked guests on Tuesday at a black-tie dinner for members of Congress and political allies.

et tu sponge bob

On the heels of electoral victories to bar same-sex marriage, some influential conservative Christian groups are turning their attention to a new target: the cartoon character SpongeBob SquarePants.

"Does anybody here know SpongeBob?" Dr James Dobson, founder of Focus on the Family, asked guests on Tuesday at a black-tie dinner for members of Congress and political allies.

Bush resolves to spread cause of liberty worldwide

The 'calling of our time,' inaugural address asserts
(By Rick Klein, Globe Staff)
Declaring an American commitment to "liberty throughout all the world," George Walker Bush yesterday took the oath of office for a second presidential term with a call for national unity in advancing the cause of freedom at home and abroad, and a vow to stamp out tyranny wherever it is found.

Bush resolves to spread cause of liberty worldwide

The 'calling of our time,' inaugural address asserts
(By Rick Klein, Globe Staff)
Declaring an American commitment to "liberty throughout all the world," George Walker Bush yesterday took the oath of office for a second presidential term with a call for national unity in advancing the cause of freedom at home and abroad, and a vow to stamp out tyranny wherever it is found.

Bush resolves to spread cause of liberty worldwide

The 'calling of our time,' inaugural address asserts
(By Rick Klein, Globe Staff)
Declaring an American commitment to "liberty throughout all the world," George Walker Bush yesterday took the oath of office for a second presidential term with a call for national unity in advancing the cause of freedom at home and abroad, and a vow to stamp out tyranny wherever it is found.

January 20, 2005

How cold is it

Creaking Houses Prompt Reports of Gunfire
Wed Jan 19, 2005 01:35 PM ET

OTTAWA (Reuters) - A cold spell gripping Ottawa is so intense that houses have started to produce loud cracking noises, prompting worried citizens to report burglaries and gunfire, local police said Wednesday.
Spokeswoman Monique Ackland said police had received around 20 calls Monday night and Tuesday morning, when temperatures in the Canadian capital dipped to an unseasonably low minus 40 Celsius (minus 40 Fahrenheit).

"Those were calls about breaking and entering, people making excessive noise and calls about gunshots," she said. Police responded to each alarm and rapidly realized crime was not responsible.

"Those calls were all (prompted by) the cold," she said, adding that one possible reason for the loud noises were exploding nails.

How cold is it

Creaking Houses Prompt Reports of Gunfire
Wed Jan 19, 2005 01:35 PM ET

OTTAWA (Reuters) - A cold spell gripping Ottawa is so intense that houses have started to produce loud cracking noises, prompting worried citizens to report burglaries and gunfire, local police said Wednesday.
Spokeswoman Monique Ackland said police had received around 20 calls Monday night and Tuesday morning, when temperatures in the Canadian capital dipped to an unseasonably low minus 40 Celsius (minus 40 Fahrenheit).

"Those were calls about breaking and entering, people making excessive noise and calls about gunshots," she said. Police responded to each alarm and rapidly realized crime was not responsible.

"Those calls were all (prompted by) the cold," she said, adding that one possible reason for the loud noises were exploding nails.

How cold is it

Creaking Houses Prompt Reports of Gunfire
Wed Jan 19, 2005 01:35 PM ET

OTTAWA (Reuters) - A cold spell gripping Ottawa is so intense that houses have started to produce loud cracking noises, prompting worried citizens to report burglaries and gunfire, local police said Wednesday.
Spokeswoman Monique Ackland said police had received around 20 calls Monday night and Tuesday morning, when temperatures in the Canadian capital dipped to an unseasonably low minus 40 Celsius (minus 40 Fahrenheit).

"Those were calls about breaking and entering, people making excessive noise and calls about gunshots," she said. Police responded to each alarm and rapidly realized crime was not responsible.

"Those calls were all (prompted by) the cold," she said, adding that one possible reason for the loud noises were exploding nails.

holy Toledo....she had a cow ...man

Woman Gives Birth to Giant Baby
SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) -- A woman in northeastern Brazil has given birth to what one doctor called a "giant baby," a boy weighing 16.7 pounds.

Francisca Ramos dos Santos, 38, gave birth to the healthy boy named Ademilton on Tuesday at a hospital in Salvador, 900 miles northeast of Sao Paulo. He was the largest baby born at the Albert Sabin Maternity Hospital in its 12-year history, the hospital said.

"Obviously the baby was born by Caesarean section," hospital director Rita Leal said. "Both mother and baby are doing just fine."

holy Toledo....she had a cow ...man

Woman Gives Birth to Giant Baby
SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) -- A woman in northeastern Brazil has given birth to what one doctor called a "giant baby," a boy weighing 16.7 pounds.

Francisca Ramos dos Santos, 38, gave birth to the healthy boy named Ademilton on Tuesday at a hospital in Salvador, 900 miles northeast of Sao Paulo. He was the largest baby born at the Albert Sabin Maternity Hospital in its 12-year history, the hospital said.

"Obviously the baby was born by Caesarean section," hospital director Rita Leal said. "Both mother and baby are doing just fine."

holy Toledo....she had a cow ...man

Woman Gives Birth to Giant Baby
SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) -- A woman in northeastern Brazil has given birth to what one doctor called a "giant baby," a boy weighing 16.7 pounds.

Francisca Ramos dos Santos, 38, gave birth to the healthy boy named Ademilton on Tuesday at a hospital in Salvador, 900 miles northeast of Sao Paulo. He was the largest baby born at the Albert Sabin Maternity Hospital in its 12-year history, the hospital said.

"Obviously the baby was born by Caesarean section," hospital director Rita Leal said. "Both mother and baby are doing just fine."

and the award gopes to-

Professor who killed baby to be honored
By Associated Press | January 20, 2005

VILLANOVA, Pa. -- Mine Ener's colleagues and former students at Villanova University are dedicating a memorial student lounge in her name, an honor critics at the Roman Catholic school call inappropriate for a professor who killed her baby daughter while in the throes of postpartum depression.

Ener, who committed suicide in a Minnesota jail less than a month after killing her baby, taught at the university's Center for Arab and Islamic Studies. The deaths shocked faculty and students preparing to return for the fall 2003 semester.

and the award gopes to-

Professor who killed baby to be honored
By Associated Press | January 20, 2005

VILLANOVA, Pa. -- Mine Ener's colleagues and former students at Villanova University are dedicating a memorial student lounge in her name, an honor critics at the Roman Catholic school call inappropriate for a professor who killed her baby daughter while in the throes of postpartum depression.

Ener, who committed suicide in a Minnesota jail less than a month after killing her baby, taught at the university's Center for Arab and Islamic Studies. The deaths shocked faculty and students preparing to return for the fall 2003 semester.

and the award gopes to-

Professor who killed baby to be honored
By Associated Press | January 20, 2005

VILLANOVA, Pa. -- Mine Ener's colleagues and former students at Villanova University are dedicating a memorial student lounge in her name, an honor critics at the Roman Catholic school call inappropriate for a professor who killed her baby daughter while in the throes of postpartum depression.

Ener, who committed suicide in a Minnesota jail less than a month after killing her baby, taught at the university's Center for Arab and Islamic Studies. The deaths shocked faculty and students preparing to return for the fall 2003 semester.

Organ lost

Historic organ lost in Jamaica Plain fire
By Michael Levenson, Globe Correspondent | January 20, 2005

A majestic pre-Civil War pipe organ that was among the best-preserved in the United States burned to ruins in the fire that gutted First Baptist Church in Jamaica Plain on Tuesday, the church's former music director said yesterday.

The instrument was one of the few remaining antebellum organs to employ three separate manuals, or keyboards. It had been manufactured in 1859 by E. & G.G. Hook of Boston, among the greatest organ builders of their time, Leonardo Ciampa said.

Organ lost

Historic organ lost in Jamaica Plain fire
By Michael Levenson, Globe Correspondent | January 20, 2005

A majestic pre-Civil War pipe organ that was among the best-preserved in the United States burned to ruins in the fire that gutted First Baptist Church in Jamaica Plain on Tuesday, the church's former music director said yesterday.

The instrument was one of the few remaining antebellum organs to employ three separate manuals, or keyboards. It had been manufactured in 1859 by E. & G.G. Hook of Boston, among the greatest organ builders of their time, Leonardo Ciampa said.

Organ lost

Historic organ lost in Jamaica Plain fire
By Michael Levenson, Globe Correspondent | January 20, 2005

A majestic pre-Civil War pipe organ that was among the best-preserved in the United States burned to ruins in the fire that gutted First Baptist Church in Jamaica Plain on Tuesday, the church's former music director said yesterday.

The instrument was one of the few remaining antebellum organs to employ three separate manuals, or keyboards. It had been manufactured in 1859 by E. & G.G. Hook of Boston, among the greatest organ builders of their time, Leonardo Ciampa said.

we made the national news for something besides sports

Boston gets terror threat warning
By Thomas Frank and Kevin Johnson, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — The FBI notified Boston-area law enforcement agencies Wednesday to be on the lookout for four Chinese nationals described as possible terrorism suspects who may be headed to the area.

we made the national news for something besides sports

Boston gets terror threat warning
By Thomas Frank and Kevin Johnson, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — The FBI notified Boston-area law enforcement agencies Wednesday to be on the lookout for four Chinese nationals described as possible terrorism suspects who may be headed to the area.

we made the national news for something besides sports

Boston gets terror threat warning
By Thomas Frank and Kevin Johnson, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — The FBI notified Boston-area law enforcement agencies Wednesday to be on the lookout for four Chinese nationals described as possible terrorism suspects who may be headed to the area.

January 18, 2005

This didn't happen in England....and no royalty involved

HIALEAH, Fla. -- The people who live in a Hialeah neighborhood say they are outraged by displays of hatred on a house there.

Take A Slideshow Tour Of The House

The home has six swastikas splashed across a fence and another one etched into the door. But it is a message apparently directed at President George W. Bush that has caught the attention of the Secret Service.

Yanis Leidy, who lives near the home that is located on the corner of East 52nd Street and 9th Court, is worried.

"It concerns me," Leidy said. "It worries me that this person might do something else."

Hialeah police records show code enforcement and animal control officers visited this home last September, following complaints. Police say they were looking for owner Billie Morgan.

Monday, despite three visits Local 10 made to the house and leaving telephone messages, neither Morgan nor his wife would give us a comment.

But the Anti-Defamation League did make a comment and they expressed alarm.

Art Teitelbaum, with the Anti-Defamation League, said, "People in almost any neighborhood will recognize that the swastika represents everything that America stands against: bigotry, hatred, war, and destruction -- and the Holocaust itself"

SURVEY
Should swastikas and hate messages be allowed under freedom of speech, or should such signs be prevented?
They should be allowed.
They should be stopped.

The fence has other prominent signs and warnings, but most disturbing may be a spray-painted message the U.S. Secret Service will investigate as a possible threat against the president.

While displaying swastikas is not illegal, the message could be another matter.

Prominently painted on an awning are the words, "Die Bush."

This didn't happen in England....and no royalty involved

HIALEAH, Fla. -- The people who live in a Hialeah neighborhood say they are outraged by displays of hatred on a house there.

Take A Slideshow Tour Of The House

The home has six swastikas splashed across a fence and another one etched into the door. But it is a message apparently directed at President George W. Bush that has caught the attention of the Secret Service.

Yanis Leidy, who lives near the home that is located on the corner of East 52nd Street and 9th Court, is worried.

"It concerns me," Leidy said. "It worries me that this person might do something else."

Hialeah police records show code enforcement and animal control officers visited this home last September, following complaints. Police say they were looking for owner Billie Morgan.

Monday, despite three visits Local 10 made to the house and leaving telephone messages, neither Morgan nor his wife would give us a comment.

But the Anti-Defamation League did make a comment and they expressed alarm.

Art Teitelbaum, with the Anti-Defamation League, said, "People in almost any neighborhood will recognize that the swastika represents everything that America stands against: bigotry, hatred, war, and destruction -- and the Holocaust itself"

SURVEY
Should swastikas and hate messages be allowed under freedom of speech, or should such signs be prevented?
They should be allowed.
They should be stopped.

The fence has other prominent signs and warnings, but most disturbing may be a spray-painted message the U.S. Secret Service will investigate as a possible threat against the president.

While displaying swastikas is not illegal, the message could be another matter.

Prominently painted on an awning are the words, "Die Bush."

This didn't happen in England....and no royalty involved

HIALEAH, Fla. -- The people who live in a Hialeah neighborhood say they are outraged by displays of hatred on a house there.

Take A Slideshow Tour Of The House

The home has six swastikas splashed across a fence and another one etched into the door. But it is a message apparently directed at President George W. Bush that has caught the attention of the Secret Service.

Yanis Leidy, who lives near the home that is located on the corner of East 52nd Street and 9th Court, is worried.

"It concerns me," Leidy said. "It worries me that this person might do something else."

Hialeah police records show code enforcement and animal control officers visited this home last September, following complaints. Police say they were looking for owner Billie Morgan.

Monday, despite three visits Local 10 made to the house and leaving telephone messages, neither Morgan nor his wife would give us a comment.

But the Anti-Defamation League did make a comment and they expressed alarm.

Art Teitelbaum, with the Anti-Defamation League, said, "People in almost any neighborhood will recognize that the swastika represents everything that America stands against: bigotry, hatred, war, and destruction -- and the Holocaust itself"

SURVEY
Should swastikas and hate messages be allowed under freedom of speech, or should such signs be prevented?
They should be allowed.
They should be stopped.

The fence has other prominent signs and warnings, but most disturbing may be a spray-painted message the U.S. Secret Service will investigate as a possible threat against the president.

While displaying swastikas is not illegal, the message could be another matter.

Prominently painted on an awning are the words, "Die Bush."

READ IT AND WEEP


GLOBE EDITORIAL
Unfit as attorney general
January 18, 2005

TWO MEMOS on the US treatment of detainees from Afghanistan and Iraq stand in the way of Alberto Gonzales becoming the next attorney general of the United States. At his confirmation hearing earlier this month, he neither disavowed the memos nor showed an understanding of how their denial of international protections to detainess could lead to the many cases of prisoner abuse reported by both the FBI and the International Red Cross. The Senate should reject his nomination.

In his testimony, Gonzales made frequent reference to the much-photographed instances of prisoner humiliation and abuse at Abu Ghraib, as though the naked-body pyramid and other abuses that Specialist Charles Graner was justifiably convicted of Friday were the worst of what has occurred. But the FBI and Red Cross reports as well as the military's own investigations of killings of prisoners make clear that some interrogators and guards crossed the line into torture or homicide. It is disingenuous of Gonzales not to acknowledge the link between permissive torture policies from Washington and acts of abuse that occurred not just at Abu Ghraib but in Afghanistan and Guantanamo as well.

In 2002 as White House counsel, Gonzales wrote a memo in which he called provisions of the Geneva Conventions regarding prisoners of war "obsolete" and "quaint" and said the United States could operate as though the conventions did not apply to the Afghan war. Indeed, some of the fighters captured during the 2001 war against the Taliban and Al Qaeda in Afghanistan might not have deserved the status of POWs.

But the Geneva Conventions -- and American law -- make clear that any battlefield detainee has that status until a "competent tribunal" puts him in the less protected category of "enemy combatant." As US Judge James Robertson noted in a ruling last November, the Geneva Conventions do not give any individual, including the president, the authority to say who deserves POW status. The White House counsel certainly lacks that authority.

The second memo that has damaged the US reputation worldwide was written in 2002 by a Justice Department official as a guide to interrogation techniques. The memo, which Gonzales discussed with administration officials, said a president has the power to authorize torture despite a 1994 US law banning it. At the confirmation hearing, Gonzales declined chances to repudiate that view.

The Sept. 11, 2001, attacks thrust the United States into a new kind of conflict in which useful intelligence from detainees is crucial. But Gonzales has been at the center of administration policy-making that set aside tried and true US and international rules governing the collection of this information. His blindness to the consequences of those policies makes him a poor choice for chief law enforcement officer of the nation.

READ IT AND WEEP


GLOBE EDITORIAL
Unfit as attorney general
January 18, 2005

TWO MEMOS on the US treatment of detainees from Afghanistan and Iraq stand in the way of Alberto Gonzales becoming the next attorney general of the United States. At his confirmation hearing earlier this month, he neither disavowed the memos nor showed an understanding of how their denial of international protections to detainess could lead to the many cases of prisoner abuse reported by both the FBI and the International Red Cross. The Senate should reject his nomination.

In his testimony, Gonzales made frequent reference to the much-photographed instances of prisoner humiliation and abuse at Abu Ghraib, as though the naked-body pyramid and other abuses that Specialist Charles Graner was justifiably convicted of Friday were the worst of what has occurred. But the FBI and Red Cross reports as well as the military's own investigations of killings of prisoners make clear that some interrogators and guards crossed the line into torture or homicide. It is disingenuous of Gonzales not to acknowledge the link between permissive torture policies from Washington and acts of abuse that occurred not just at Abu Ghraib but in Afghanistan and Guantanamo as well.

In 2002 as White House counsel, Gonzales wrote a memo in which he called provisions of the Geneva Conventions regarding prisoners of war "obsolete" and "quaint" and said the United States could operate as though the conventions did not apply to the Afghan war. Indeed, some of the fighters captured during the 2001 war against the Taliban and Al Qaeda in Afghanistan might not have deserved the status of POWs.

But the Geneva Conventions -- and American law -- make clear that any battlefield detainee has that status until a "competent tribunal" puts him in the less protected category of "enemy combatant." As US Judge James Robertson noted in a ruling last November, the Geneva Conventions do not give any individual, including the president, the authority to say who deserves POW status. The White House counsel certainly lacks that authority.

The second memo that has damaged the US reputation worldwide was written in 2002 by a Justice Department official as a guide to interrogation techniques. The memo, which Gonzales discussed with administration officials, said a president has the power to authorize torture despite a 1994 US law banning it. At the confirmation hearing, Gonzales declined chances to repudiate that view.

The Sept. 11, 2001, attacks thrust the United States into a new kind of conflict in which useful intelligence from detainees is crucial. But Gonzales has been at the center of administration policy-making that set aside tried and true US and international rules governing the collection of this information. His blindness to the consequences of those policies makes him a poor choice for chief law enforcement officer of the nation.

READ IT AND WEEP


GLOBE EDITORIAL
Unfit as attorney general
January 18, 2005

TWO MEMOS on the US treatment of detainees from Afghanistan and Iraq stand in the way of Alberto Gonzales becoming the next attorney general of the United States. At his confirmation hearing earlier this month, he neither disavowed the memos nor showed an understanding of how their denial of international protections to detainess could lead to the many cases of prisoner abuse reported by both the FBI and the International Red Cross. The Senate should reject his nomination.

In his testimony, Gonzales made frequent reference to the much-photographed instances of prisoner humiliation and abuse at Abu Ghraib, as though the naked-body pyramid and other abuses that Specialist Charles Graner was justifiably convicted of Friday were the worst of what has occurred. But the FBI and Red Cross reports as well as the military's own investigations of killings of prisoners make clear that some interrogators and guards crossed the line into torture or homicide. It is disingenuous of Gonzales not to acknowledge the link between permissive torture policies from Washington and acts of abuse that occurred not just at Abu Ghraib but in Afghanistan and Guantanamo as well.

In 2002 as White House counsel, Gonzales wrote a memo in which he called provisions of the Geneva Conventions regarding prisoners of war "obsolete" and "quaint" and said the United States could operate as though the conventions did not apply to the Afghan war. Indeed, some of the fighters captured during the 2001 war against the Taliban and Al Qaeda in Afghanistan might not have deserved the status of POWs.

But the Geneva Conventions -- and American law -- make clear that any battlefield detainee has that status until a "competent tribunal" puts him in the less protected category of "enemy combatant." As US Judge James Robertson noted in a ruling last November, the Geneva Conventions do not give any individual, including the president, the authority to say who deserves POW status. The White House counsel certainly lacks that authority.

The second memo that has damaged the US reputation worldwide was written in 2002 by a Justice Department official as a guide to interrogation techniques. The memo, which Gonzales discussed with administration officials, said a president has the power to authorize torture despite a 1994 US law banning it. At the confirmation hearing, Gonzales declined chances to repudiate that view.

The Sept. 11, 2001, attacks thrust the United States into a new kind of conflict in which useful intelligence from detainees is crucial. But Gonzales has been at the center of administration policy-making that set aside tried and true US and international rules governing the collection of this information. His blindness to the consequences of those policies makes him a poor choice for chief law enforcement officer of the nation.

FOR BILLY

January 18, 2005

Researchers have identified a gene that prevents the regeneration of inner-ear cells that are critical to hearing, a discovery experts say is the first step toward finding a way to correct the most common form of deafness among the elderly. In laboratory mouse studies at Massachusetts General Hospital, researchers found that by eliminating the effects of a single gene, they could cause inner-ear cells vital to hearing to regrow. The regrowth replaces nerve endings, called hair cells, that are often lost to injury or age -- and cannot regenerate. "Most deafness is caused by the loss of these hair cells," said Zheng-Yi Chen, leader of the hospital research team that published its findings in last week's issue of Science. "Now we have the means to regenerate these cells." The goal, Chen said, is to find a way to turn off this gene in the inner ear of humans, probably with a drug, and allow the regrowth of hair cells.

FOR BILLY

January 18, 2005

Researchers have identified a gene that prevents the regeneration of inner-ear cells that are critical to hearing, a discovery experts say is the first step toward finding a way to correct the most common form of deafness among the elderly. In laboratory mouse studies at Massachusetts General Hospital, researchers found that by eliminating the effects of a single gene, they could cause inner-ear cells vital to hearing to regrow. The regrowth replaces nerve endings, called hair cells, that are often lost to injury or age -- and cannot regenerate. "Most deafness is caused by the loss of these hair cells," said Zheng-Yi Chen, leader of the hospital research team that published its findings in last week's issue of Science. "Now we have the means to regenerate these cells." The goal, Chen said, is to find a way to turn off this gene in the inner ear of humans, probably with a drug, and allow the regrowth of hair cells.

FOR BILLY

January 18, 2005

Researchers have identified a gene that prevents the regeneration of inner-ear cells that are critical to hearing, a discovery experts say is the first step toward finding a way to correct the most common form of deafness among the elderly. In laboratory mouse studies at Massachusetts General Hospital, researchers found that by eliminating the effects of a single gene, they could cause inner-ear cells vital to hearing to regrow. The regrowth replaces nerve endings, called hair cells, that are often lost to injury or age -- and cannot regenerate. "Most deafness is caused by the loss of these hair cells," said Zheng-Yi Chen, leader of the hospital research team that published its findings in last week's issue of Science. "Now we have the means to regenerate these cells." The goal, Chen said, is to find a way to turn off this gene in the inner ear of humans, probably with a drug, and allow the regrowth of hair cells.

AND TWINS

WASHINGTON -- Much has changed for Barbara and Jenna Bush in the four years since their father, George W. Bush, was elected and reelected president.

ADVERTISEMENT

In 2000, the twins were camera-shy Texas high school students who made it clear they wanted no part of his campaign to become the second Bush elected president.

Four years later, and perhaps pressured by the visibility of Senator John F. Kerry's two daughters, they assumed public roles in their father's campaign.

Now, with their parents' futures set for the next four years, 23-year-old Barbara and Jenna Bush -- both of whom graduated from college last year -- are getting to work on their own.

AND TWINS

WASHINGTON -- Much has changed for Barbara and Jenna Bush in the four years since their father, George W. Bush, was elected and reelected president.

ADVERTISEMENT

In 2000, the twins were camera-shy Texas high school students who made it clear they wanted no part of his campaign to become the second Bush elected president.

Four years later, and perhaps pressured by the visibility of Senator John F. Kerry's two daughters, they assumed public roles in their father's campaign.

Now, with their parents' futures set for the next four years, 23-year-old Barbara and Jenna Bush -- both of whom graduated from college last year -- are getting to work on their own.

AND TWINS

WASHINGTON -- Much has changed for Barbara and Jenna Bush in the four years since their father, George W. Bush, was elected and reelected president.

ADVERTISEMENT

In 2000, the twins were camera-shy Texas high school students who made it clear they wanted no part of his campaign to become the second Bush elected president.

Four years later, and perhaps pressured by the visibility of Senator John F. Kerry's two daughters, they assumed public roles in their father's campaign.

Now, with their parents' futures set for the next four years, 23-year-old Barbara and Jenna Bush -- both of whom graduated from college last year -- are getting to work on their own.

Pass on this one

Colon cancer test called worthless
Study finds 95% detection failure
By Patrick Walters, Associated Press | January 18, 2005


PHILADELPHIA -- A common screening test failed to detect potentially cancerous colon growths 95 percent of the time, falsely reassuring patients and doctors, according to a new study.

ADVERTISEMENT

Researchers found that the digital in-office test on stool samples was not as reliable as a six-sample test given to patients to do on their own at home -- although even that test detected potentially cancerous growths less than 24 percent of the time.

"What we found is that it was pretty worthless," Dr. David Lieberman, one of the study's authors, said of the in-office test. "It's a wake-up call that we shouldn't be relying on this test."

DON'T GET SICK

Cuts in disability benefits seen in Social Security plan
By Leigh Strope, Associated Press | January 18, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Disability benefits may not be safe from the across-the-board cuts that are likely in President Bush's proposal to allow personal investment accounts in the Social Security program.

Retirement and disability benefits are calculated using the same formula, so if future promised retirement benefits are cut, then disability benefits also would be reduced -- unless the program is somehow separated.

This raises big questions about how investment accounts would be structured for the disabled, especially if they are injured at a young age or are dependent on a parent. Disabled beneficiaries typically work less and need benefits sooner, so the accounts would not provide enough income to them.

"The Social Security programs are insurance programs, not investment programs, designed to reduce risk from certain life events," said Marty Ford of the Consortium for Citizens With Disabilities.

Pass on this one

Colon cancer test called worthless
Study finds 95% detection failure
By Patrick Walters, Associated Press | January 18, 2005


PHILADELPHIA -- A common screening test failed to detect potentially cancerous colon growths 95 percent of the time, falsely reassuring patients and doctors, according to a new study.

ADVERTISEMENT

Researchers found that the digital in-office test on stool samples was not as reliable as a six-sample test given to patients to do on their own at home -- although even that test detected potentially cancerous growths less than 24 percent of the time.

"What we found is that it was pretty worthless," Dr. David Lieberman, one of the study's authors, said of the in-office test. "It's a wake-up call that we shouldn't be relying on this test."

DON'T GET SICK

Cuts in disability benefits seen in Social Security plan
By Leigh Strope, Associated Press | January 18, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Disability benefits may not be safe from the across-the-board cuts that are likely in President Bush's proposal to allow personal investment accounts in the Social Security program.

Retirement and disability benefits are calculated using the same formula, so if future promised retirement benefits are cut, then disability benefits also would be reduced -- unless the program is somehow separated.

This raises big questions about how investment accounts would be structured for the disabled, especially if they are injured at a young age or are dependent on a parent. Disabled beneficiaries typically work less and need benefits sooner, so the accounts would not provide enough income to them.

"The Social Security programs are insurance programs, not investment programs, designed to reduce risk from certain life events," said Marty Ford of the Consortium for Citizens With Disabilities.

Pass on this one

Colon cancer test called worthless
Study finds 95% detection failure
By Patrick Walters, Associated Press | January 18, 2005


PHILADELPHIA -- A common screening test failed to detect potentially cancerous colon growths 95 percent of the time, falsely reassuring patients and doctors, according to a new study.

ADVERTISEMENT

Researchers found that the digital in-office test on stool samples was not as reliable as a six-sample test given to patients to do on their own at home -- although even that test detected potentially cancerous growths less than 24 percent of the time.

"What we found is that it was pretty worthless," Dr. David Lieberman, one of the study's authors, said of the in-office test. "It's a wake-up call that we shouldn't be relying on this test."

DON'T GET SICK

Cuts in disability benefits seen in Social Security plan
By Leigh Strope, Associated Press | January 18, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Disability benefits may not be safe from the across-the-board cuts that are likely in President Bush's proposal to allow personal investment accounts in the Social Security program.

Retirement and disability benefits are calculated using the same formula, so if future promised retirement benefits are cut, then disability benefits also would be reduced -- unless the program is somehow separated.

This raises big questions about how investment accounts would be structured for the disabled, especially if they are injured at a young age or are dependent on a parent. Disabled beneficiaries typically work less and need benefits sooner, so the accounts would not provide enough income to them.

"The Social Security programs are insurance programs, not investment programs, designed to reduce risk from certain life events," said Marty Ford of the Consortium for Citizens With Disabilities.

here we go again

Bush won't rule out action against Iran
By Reuters | January 18, 2005

WASHINGTON -- President Bush said yesterday he would not rule out military action against Iran if Tehran is not more forthcoming about its suspected nuclear weapons program.

ADVERTISEMENT

"I hope we can solve it diplomatically, but I will never take any option off the table," Bush told NBC News, adding that he could act if Iran "continues to stonewall the international community about the existence of its nuclear weapons program."

Iran denies that it has been trying to make nuclear weapons.

Bush's comments followed Pentagon criticism yesterday of a published report that it was mounting reconnaissance missions in Iran to identify potential nuclear and other targets. Pentagon spokesman Lawrence DiRita said Sunday's article in The New Yorker magazine was "so riddled with errors of fundamental fact that the credibility of his entire piece is destroyed."

The report said Bush authorized secret commando groups and other special-forces military units to conduct covert operations against suspected terrorist targets in as many as 10 nations in the Middle East and South Asia. DiRita and other Pentagon officials did not comment on whether military forces had been doing reconnaissance in Iran.

The New York Times reported today the Bush administration imposed penalties on eight Chinese firms it thinks aided Iran in improving ballistic missiles. The State Department did not name the technology allegedly exported. The firms are barred from doing business with the US government.

here we go again

Bush won't rule out action against Iran
By Reuters | January 18, 2005

WASHINGTON -- President Bush said yesterday he would not rule out military action against Iran if Tehran is not more forthcoming about its suspected nuclear weapons program.

ADVERTISEMENT

"I hope we can solve it diplomatically, but I will never take any option off the table," Bush told NBC News, adding that he could act if Iran "continues to stonewall the international community about the existence of its nuclear weapons program."

Iran denies that it has been trying to make nuclear weapons.

Bush's comments followed Pentagon criticism yesterday of a published report that it was mounting reconnaissance missions in Iran to identify potential nuclear and other targets. Pentagon spokesman Lawrence DiRita said Sunday's article in The New Yorker magazine was "so riddled with errors of fundamental fact that the credibility of his entire piece is destroyed."

The report said Bush authorized secret commando groups and other special-forces military units to conduct covert operations against suspected terrorist targets in as many as 10 nations in the Middle East and South Asia. DiRita and other Pentagon officials did not comment on whether military forces had been doing reconnaissance in Iran.

The New York Times reported today the Bush administration imposed penalties on eight Chinese firms it thinks aided Iran in improving ballistic missiles. The State Department did not name the technology allegedly exported. The firms are barred from doing business with the US government.

here we go again

Bush won't rule out action against Iran
By Reuters | January 18, 2005

WASHINGTON -- President Bush said yesterday he would not rule out military action against Iran if Tehran is not more forthcoming about its suspected nuclear weapons program.

ADVERTISEMENT

"I hope we can solve it diplomatically, but I will never take any option off the table," Bush told NBC News, adding that he could act if Iran "continues to stonewall the international community about the existence of its nuclear weapons program."

Iran denies that it has been trying to make nuclear weapons.

Bush's comments followed Pentagon criticism yesterday of a published report that it was mounting reconnaissance missions in Iran to identify potential nuclear and other targets. Pentagon spokesman Lawrence DiRita said Sunday's article in The New Yorker magazine was "so riddled with errors of fundamental fact that the credibility of his entire piece is destroyed."

The report said Bush authorized secret commando groups and other special-forces military units to conduct covert operations against suspected terrorist targets in as many as 10 nations in the Middle East and South Asia. DiRita and other Pentagon officials did not comment on whether military forces had been doing reconnaissance in Iran.

The New York Times reported today the Bush administration imposed penalties on eight Chinese firms it thinks aided Iran in improving ballistic missiles. The State Department did not name the technology allegedly exported. The firms are barred from doing business with the US government.

I'd go and vote

Kidnapping, more deaths rock Iraq
(By Anthony Shadid, Washington Post)
Insurgents who have vowed to disrupt Iraq's parliamentary elections unleashed attacks yesterday across Iraq, from the kidnapping of a Catholic archbishop and a car bombing at a police station in the north to mortar attacks on polling stations in Basra in the south. At least 18 people were killed.

I'd go and vote

Kidnapping, more deaths rock Iraq
(By Anthony Shadid, Washington Post)
Insurgents who have vowed to disrupt Iraq's parliamentary elections unleashed attacks yesterday across Iraq, from the kidnapping of a Catholic archbishop and a car bombing at a police station in the north to mortar attacks on polling stations in Basra in the south. At least 18 people were killed.

I'd go and vote

Kidnapping, more deaths rock Iraq
(By Anthony Shadid, Washington Post)
Insurgents who have vowed to disrupt Iraq's parliamentary elections unleashed attacks yesterday across Iraq, from the kidnapping of a Catholic archbishop and a car bombing at a police station in the north to mortar attacks on polling stations in Basra in the south. At least 18 people were killed.

January 15, 2005

POP

Woman's acupuncture treatment goes bust

January 11 2005 at 06:31PM

Taipei - A shy Taiwanese woman saw her D-cup bust shrink back to an A-cup after receiving an acupuncture treatment for pimples on her face, a doctor said on Tuesday.

The woman, in her late 20s, who had saline implant surgery to enlarge her breasts, recently went to an acupuncture clinic to treat her facial pimples, said Dr Chen Huan-tang of Taiwan's Chang Gung Memorial Hospital.

"The patient was told by the acupuncturist that needling would be done on her left breast, but being too shy to tell the truth, the woman just let the acupuncturist pierce her implant chest," said Dr Chen.
"Weeks later, she found her left breast shrank back to A-cup, a contrast to her D-cup breast on the right, and she finally came to us for help," said Dr Chen, who declined to identify the woman.

He said the small acupuncture needles damaged the saline-filled implant, resulting in leaking of the solution and hence shrinkage of her left breast.

"Fortunately, saline solution is not harmful to the body, or she would have suffered even more," the doctor said.

But he said it took much bigger efforts to refill the left breast to the same size as the right one.

POP

Woman's acupuncture treatment goes bust

January 11 2005 at 06:31PM

Taipei - A shy Taiwanese woman saw her D-cup bust shrink back to an A-cup after receiving an acupuncture treatment for pimples on her face, a doctor said on Tuesday.

The woman, in her late 20s, who had saline implant surgery to enlarge her breasts, recently went to an acupuncture clinic to treat her facial pimples, said Dr Chen Huan-tang of Taiwan's Chang Gung Memorial Hospital.

"The patient was told by the acupuncturist that needling would be done on her left breast, but being too shy to tell the truth, the woman just let the acupuncturist pierce her implant chest," said Dr Chen.
"Weeks later, she found her left breast shrank back to A-cup, a contrast to her D-cup breast on the right, and she finally came to us for help," said Dr Chen, who declined to identify the woman.

He said the small acupuncture needles damaged the saline-filled implant, resulting in leaking of the solution and hence shrinkage of her left breast.

"Fortunately, saline solution is not harmful to the body, or she would have suffered even more," the doctor said.

But he said it took much bigger efforts to refill the left breast to the same size as the right one.

POP

Woman's acupuncture treatment goes bust

January 11 2005 at 06:31PM

Taipei - A shy Taiwanese woman saw her D-cup bust shrink back to an A-cup after receiving an acupuncture treatment for pimples on her face, a doctor said on Tuesday.

The woman, in her late 20s, who had saline implant surgery to enlarge her breasts, recently went to an acupuncture clinic to treat her facial pimples, said Dr Chen Huan-tang of Taiwan's Chang Gung Memorial Hospital.

"The patient was told by the acupuncturist that needling would be done on her left breast, but being too shy to tell the truth, the woman just let the acupuncturist pierce her implant chest," said Dr Chen.
"Weeks later, she found her left breast shrank back to A-cup, a contrast to her D-cup breast on the right, and she finally came to us for help," said Dr Chen, who declined to identify the woman.

He said the small acupuncture needles damaged the saline-filled implant, resulting in leaking of the solution and hence shrinkage of her left breast.

"Fortunately, saline solution is not harmful to the body, or she would have suffered even more," the doctor said.

But he said it took much bigger efforts to refill the left breast to the same size as the right one.

what's the cost

THE WORLD TODAY
US-led forces damaged Babylon, report finds
January 15, 2005

Britain

LONDON -- US-led forces, using Iraq's ancient city of Babylon as a military base, have caused "substantial damage" to one of the world's most renowned archeological treasures, a British Museum report said. The report, quoted in today's Guardian newspaper, said US and Polish military vehicles had crushed 2,600-year-old pavements in the city, a cradle of civilization and home to one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. Archeological fragments were used to fill sand bags, it added. John Curtis, keeper of the museum's Ancient and Near East department, invited to visit Babylon by Iraqi antiquities specialists, also said he had found cracks and gaps made by people who had apparently tried to gouge out the decorated bricks forming the famous dragons of the city's Ishtar Gate. US military commanders set up a base in Babylon in April 2003, just after the invasion to topple Saddam Hussein, and handed it over to a Polish-led force five months later. (Reuters)

what's the cost

THE WORLD TODAY
US-led forces damaged Babylon, report finds
January 15, 2005

Britain

LONDON -- US-led forces, using Iraq's ancient city of Babylon as a military base, have caused "substantial damage" to one of the world's most renowned archeological treasures, a British Museum report said. The report, quoted in today's Guardian newspaper, said US and Polish military vehicles had crushed 2,600-year-old pavements in the city, a cradle of civilization and home to one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. Archeological fragments were used to fill sand bags, it added. John Curtis, keeper of the museum's Ancient and Near East department, invited to visit Babylon by Iraqi antiquities specialists, also said he had found cracks and gaps made by people who had apparently tried to gouge out the decorated bricks forming the famous dragons of the city's Ishtar Gate. US military commanders set up a base in Babylon in April 2003, just after the invasion to topple Saddam Hussein, and handed it over to a Polish-led force five months later. (Reuters)

what's the cost

THE WORLD TODAY
US-led forces damaged Babylon, report finds
January 15, 2005

Britain

LONDON -- US-led forces, using Iraq's ancient city of Babylon as a military base, have caused "substantial damage" to one of the world's most renowned archeological treasures, a British Museum report said. The report, quoted in today's Guardian newspaper, said US and Polish military vehicles had crushed 2,600-year-old pavements in the city, a cradle of civilization and home to one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. Archeological fragments were used to fill sand bags, it added. John Curtis, keeper of the museum's Ancient and Near East department, invited to visit Babylon by Iraqi antiquities specialists, also said he had found cracks and gaps made by people who had apparently tried to gouge out the decorated bricks forming the famous dragons of the city's Ishtar Gate. US military commanders set up a base in Babylon in April 2003, just after the invasion to topple Saddam Hussein, and handed it over to a Polish-led force five months later. (Reuters)

civil war

Sunni group says it killed Shi'ite aide
Gunmen seize 15 Iraqi troops in bus ambush
By Anthony Shadid, Washington Post | January 15, 2005

BAGHDAD -- A Sunni Muslim insurgent group that has vowed to disrupt Iraq's Jan. 30 elections claimed responsibility yesterday for the assassination of an aide of the country's most prominent Shi'ite Muslim religious leader, and suspected insurgents abducted 15 Iraqi soldiers and torched their bus in restive western Iraq.

civil war

Sunni group says it killed Shi'ite aide
Gunmen seize 15 Iraqi troops in bus ambush
By Anthony Shadid, Washington Post | January 15, 2005

BAGHDAD -- A Sunni Muslim insurgent group that has vowed to disrupt Iraq's Jan. 30 elections claimed responsibility yesterday for the assassination of an aide of the country's most prominent Shi'ite Muslim religious leader, and suspected insurgents abducted 15 Iraqi soldiers and torched their bus in restive western Iraq.

civil war

Sunni group says it killed Shi'ite aide
Gunmen seize 15 Iraqi troops in bus ambush
By Anthony Shadid, Washington Post | January 15, 2005

BAGHDAD -- A Sunni Muslim insurgent group that has vowed to disrupt Iraq's Jan. 30 elections claimed responsibility yesterday for the assassination of an aide of the country's most prominent Shi'ite Muslim religious leader, and suspected insurgents abducted 15 Iraqi soldiers and torched their bus in restive western Iraq.

what's good for the goose


GOP seeks exemption to bias law
By Rick Klein, Globe Staff | January 15, 2005

WASHINGTON -- House Republican leaders want to exempt members of Congress from laws against discrimination that apply to private employers, despite the Republicans' Contract With America pledge that ''all laws that apply to the rest of the country also apply equally to the Congress" and a decade-old law that placed Congress under antidiscrimination statutes.

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Last week, in response to a discrimination lawsuit filed against a Democratic House member, Speaker J. Dennis Hastert, majority leader Tom DeLay, and majority whip Roy Blunt submitted a ''friend of the court" brief on behalf of the House, saying members of Congress should be shielded from discrimination suits.

They said the Constitution protects representatives' ability to study and craft legislation with the staff members they choose, regardless of laws that prohibit employment decisions based on factors such as age, race, gender, and disabilities.

But Democratic House leaders refused to sign off on the House brief, saying that if the court accepts that reasoning, the 10-year-old Congressional Accountability Act would be rendered meaningless. That law, passed shortly after the Republican takeover of Congress in 1995 and designed on the first plank of the Contract with America, specifically stated that Congress should be covered by the same statutes against discrimination that apply to private-sector employers.

''This is a total flip-flop, a repudiation of the contract," said Representative Barney Frank, Democrat of Newton, who held a news conference yesterday to call attention to the Republicans' move. ''It's really wrong for Congress to pass laws that cover the private sector that don't cover ourselves."

what's good for the goose


GOP seeks exemption to bias law
By Rick Klein, Globe Staff | January 15, 2005

WASHINGTON -- House Republican leaders want to exempt members of Congress from laws against discrimination that apply to private employers, despite the Republicans' Contract With America pledge that ''all laws that apply to the rest of the country also apply equally to the Congress" and a decade-old law that placed Congress under antidiscrimination statutes.

ADVERTISEMENT

Last week, in response to a discrimination lawsuit filed against a Democratic House member, Speaker J. Dennis Hastert, majority leader Tom DeLay, and majority whip Roy Blunt submitted a ''friend of the court" brief on behalf of the House, saying members of Congress should be shielded from discrimination suits.

They said the Constitution protects representatives' ability to study and craft legislation with the staff members they choose, regardless of laws that prohibit employment decisions based on factors such as age, race, gender, and disabilities.

But Democratic House leaders refused to sign off on the House brief, saying that if the court accepts that reasoning, the 10-year-old Congressional Accountability Act would be rendered meaningless. That law, passed shortly after the Republican takeover of Congress in 1995 and designed on the first plank of the Contract with America, specifically stated that Congress should be covered by the same statutes against discrimination that apply to private-sector employers.

''This is a total flip-flop, a repudiation of the contract," said Representative Barney Frank, Democrat of Newton, who held a news conference yesterday to call attention to the Republicans' move. ''It's really wrong for Congress to pass laws that cover the private sector that don't cover ourselves."

what's good for the goose


GOP seeks exemption to bias law
By Rick Klein, Globe Staff | January 15, 2005

WASHINGTON -- House Republican leaders want to exempt members of Congress from laws against discrimination that apply to private employers, despite the Republicans' Contract With America pledge that ''all laws that apply to the rest of the country also apply equally to the Congress" and a decade-old law that placed Congress under antidiscrimination statutes.

ADVERTISEMENT

Last week, in response to a discrimination lawsuit filed against a Democratic House member, Speaker J. Dennis Hastert, majority leader Tom DeLay, and majority whip Roy Blunt submitted a ''friend of the court" brief on behalf of the House, saying members of Congress should be shielded from discrimination suits.

They said the Constitution protects representatives' ability to study and craft legislation with the staff members they choose, regardless of laws that prohibit employment decisions based on factors such as age, race, gender, and disabilities.

But Democratic House leaders refused to sign off on the House brief, saying that if the court accepts that reasoning, the 10-year-old Congressional Accountability Act would be rendered meaningless. That law, passed shortly after the Republican takeover of Congress in 1995 and designed on the first plank of the Contract with America, specifically stated that Congress should be covered by the same statutes against discrimination that apply to private-sector employers.

''This is a total flip-flop, a repudiation of the contract," said Representative Barney Frank, Democrat of Newton, who held a news conference yesterday to call attention to the Republicans' move. ''It's really wrong for Congress to pass laws that cover the private sector that don't cover ourselves."