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September 20, 2005|
Opera Sans Adverts
I have long thought Opera was a great browser, but I never really used it outside of web development (compatibility testing) because the free downloadable version was supported by ads. Well, that sun has set. I'm going to go try it out.
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NatureScape Broward
Apparently you can fill out an application to the county that will allow you to be eligible for a small grant to improve the looks of your yard. They wanted me to, in 100 words or less, explain with detail and color why my yard is screaming to win the NatureScape Makeover. Well. Here I go. Dirt scuttles freely from one part of the yard to the next, eager to find a surface to cling to. It is not a picky sort of dirt, any surface will do: rock, weed or feet.
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RSS Keyword News: Google And Yahoo Examples
I thought that it was the greatest thing since floating soap the day I discovered that Yahoo could be cajoled into producing an RSS feed based on Keyword Searches: http://news.search.yahoo.com/usns/ynsearch/categories/news_story_search_rss/index.html?p=broward And now, Google can do it, too! http://news.google.com/news?q=broward&output=rss Woo Hoo!
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You Would Think That They had all Fallen off by now
Just made a trip to Winn Dixie for some various sundries and a bottle of wine. We pretty much ignored Rita even though she is whispering loudly through the neighborhood at the moment. Dang if there wasn't fallen tree limbs on the way to the store. You would have thought that Katrina pulled down the loose fodder already. Guess there is always a limb or two to spare for the occasional passing hurricane.
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Dan's News (Fish Tales, Sad Tale, Apple is at it Again)
Fish Tales This is a pretty neat article about a scientist that trying to save the largest fish in the sea from extinction. There were reports of 200-600lb Chinese carp and 1300lb stingray. If he finds these fish, he will be internationally recognized, and he will add another couple of species to the catalog. If he fails then I guess he spent his life chasing "fish tales". This is very sad The underdeveloped baby epidemic has reached a high, this is really bad. Let's hope it's just an evolutionary phase or something like that. Apple's at it again Go back to computers you MP3 wannabees! As I have said before I don't like apple. This new phone of theirs is not on my christmas list. The union I hesitate to put this story on the site, only because it makes me mad thinking about the disrespect these authors are showing toward Katrina victims. Even I don't hate mice that much!
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Flamethrower now an Option on South African Cars
And you thought OUR crime rate was bad... JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (CNN) -- Crime-obsessed South Africans have a powerful new weapon with which to stop likely criminals: the car flamethrower. The first buyer, Police Superintendent David Walkley of Johannesburg's crime intelligence unit, is satisfied the Blaster is legal, provided it is used correctly.
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Nailing Down the Weekend before Katrina
Recently I have been confused as to what went on between the President and Governor Blanco the Friday and Saturday before the storm hit. This is an excerpt from an e-mail that Dr Sanity received from a Journalist friend of hers which supports the Washington Post's article about Bush trying to get Blanco to pass him the ball late Friday evening. President Bush spent Friday afternoon and evening in meetings with his advisors and administrators drafting all of the paperwork required for a state to request federal assistance (and not be in violation of the Posse Comitatus Act or having to enact the Insurgency Act). Just before midnight Friday evening the President called Governor Blanco and pleaded with her to sign the request papers so the federal government and the military could legally begin mobilization and call up. He was told that they didn't think it necessary for the federal government to be involved yet. After the President's final call to the governor she held meetings with her staff to discuss the political ramifications of bringing federal forces. It was decided that if they allowed federal assistance it would make it look as if they had failed so it was agreed upon that the feds would not be invited in. Yesterday I was confused after reading this over at NOLA.COM: One flashpoint came over the weekend, when Blanco said she rebuffed an attempt by the White House to seize control of the mounting military presence in Louisiana, including thousands of state National Guard forces under her authority. Over in the comments section at Protein Wisdom we thought that the Washington Post might have had their events out of sequence, but now I am beginning to think that the NOLA article simply refers to an ongoing attempt by the Bush administration to get personal control over this thing.
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109 Days and Counting (Kerry's 180)
It has been 109 days since John F. Kerry signed his form 180 and the public has yet to see "at least a hundred pages" of unreleased documents from Naval Archives. According to O'Neill, "The Standard Form 180 could release 'the full military and medical records.' Or it could release just a few. It all depends on how it is filled out and where it was sent." Of particular interest to this blogger is discovering exactly how John Kerry left the military. There is strong evidence that Senator Kerry did not receive an honorable discharge, and benefited from President Carter's issuance of amnesty for "military resistors". That is a serious lie of omission for someone who based their campaign on the image of his service in Vietnam. Frankly, I'd have had more respect for him if turned out to be a soldier of valor and a citizen of conscience. It's a shame that he was neither. The Swift Boat Veterans cast enough reasonable doubt his character as a soldier. Meeting with the enemy in Paris while still in the Naval Reserve would have easily compromised his honorable discharge, and even Kerry knew better than to delve into his past as a protester - especially after his participation (even leadership) in the fabricated lies of the Winter Soldier Investigation. While we are on topic, this article should not go unread either. Cao's Blog is still hosting the Tuesday Blogburst to see Kerry's 180 released to the public in full.
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Sanity
Dr Sanity reads a great article by conservative thinker Thomas Sowell. This is a great quote: Thousands of people in New Orleans will be saved because millions of other people they don't even know are moved by moral obligations to come to their rescue from all corners of this country. The things our clever sophisticates sneer at are ultimately all that stand between any of us and utter devastation. That perfectly describes why I feel at home under the "conservative" moniker even though I don't have a problem with things that are typically anethma to the social conservative (not a bad word) such as gay marriage or properly managed welfare (re: work programs). Moral fiber. Not moral relativism. Dr Sanity has her own point to make: What has changed in our society, Sowell wonders? Well, to put it bluntly, we have moved from a society of individual personal responsibility to one of infantile entitlement. And this underscores one of the reasons why I am attracted to the imperfect Bush administration: ownership versus entitlement. If we all had a firm investment in our future, perhaps we would not be so careless with it. ...like building levees that you know are vulnerable, not evacuating in the face of utter destruction and expecting someone else (like the government) to provide for your family.
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The Clintonian Rebirth of FEMA
This is an interesting article about the evolution of FEMA that began under President George H.W. Bush and was realized and guided to fruition under President Clinton. Doesn't the FEMA that we have been seeing on the news this past week sound like the old FEMA described in this article? leaving nearly 200,000 residents homeless and 1.3 million without electricity. Food, clean water, shelter, and medical assistance were scarce. Yet, for the first three days, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), which is responsible for coordinating federal disaster relief, was nowhere to be found. And when FEMA did finally arrive, its incompetence further delayed relief efforts. Food and water distribution centers couldn't meet the overwhelming need; lines literally stretched for miles. Mobile hospitals arrived late. In everything it did, FEMA appeared to live up to the description once given to it by South Carolina Sen. Ernest Hollings: "the sorriest bunch of bureaucratic jackasses I've ever known." Florida was slow to realize its own dire straits because many of its emergency workers were among the storm's victims. Half of the members of the Dade County Police and Fire Departments had lost their homes. Most of the area's fire and police stations were destroyed. Like their fellow southern Floridians, disaster management workers were looking for food, water, shelter, and medical care. The state was unable to issue specific requests for aid because it had no one available to assess the damage. Andrew Card pressed then Florida Governor Chiles to accept Federal aid and resources - not FEMA, but military aid. Once the regular troops hit the ground, the people felt it. The next day 3,500 troops were in southern Florida, the first of 17,000 that would eventually serve. Almost immediately, Hale says, the situation changed. "The first thing that happened was the morale improved the minute that people felt they weren't alone, they weren't abandoned.... You could just see people find the strength to go one more day when they were at the point of collapse." The agency was restructured and streamlined under President Clinton, earning itself a much better reputation for responding to catastrophies such as the Oklahoma City bombing. Virtually overnight, the agency has developed a new reputation for quickness and efficiency. Gone are the bureaucratic swamps that the old FEMA had made its hallmark. It is telling that when state disaster officials talk about FEMA's response time, they no longer speak in days or weeks, but in hours. They speak of phone calls, not of forms dropped in the mail. So how did the FEMA of today become so much like the animal that it used to be? Is it simply because it was assigned to Homeland Security? Is it the leadership of UnderSecretary Michael Brown? Is it the political landscape of the Department of Homeland Security? ...or are the problems now entirely different? I look forward to an independent commission's investigation. I disagree with Senator Hilary Clinton's suggestion to break FEMA away from Homeland Security. I think that we need to have one, unified command structure. Our Intelligence failures in 9/11 should have convinced everyone by now that we need to all be on the same page. ...by the same token, if we have bloated the chain of command with burdensome bureaucracy, then we need to trim the fat and make things more efficient.
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Katrina and the Welfare State
An interesting article by Robert Tracinski over at The Intellectual Activist. ...Public officials did not expect that the first thing they would have to do is to send thousands of armed troops in armored vehicle, as if they are suppressing an enemy insurgency. And journalists-myself included-did not expect that the story would not be about rain, wind, and flooding, but about rape, murder, and looting.
People living in piles of their own trash, while petulantly complaining that other people aren't doing enough to take care of them and then shooting at those who come to rescue them-this is not just a description of the chaos at the Superdome. It is a perfect summary of the 40-year history of the welfare state and its public housing projects.
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Dan's News (Mars, Teens and Eww)
Mars... No problem Neil Armstrong thinks that it will be less difficult to get to mars than it was to get to the moon. I think so too Armstrong, duh. you had 10 years to fully design a rocket and get to the moon, we have 20 years and technology we can look back on. "It will be expensive", thanks, I would never have guessed. Teen Hackers These kids went into their school's computer data base to change some grades for their friends. Smart people, too bad they lack common sense! EWW This is some nasty stuff, just remember not to step in the freezer. Funny Stuff- Union news Gatorade- third world country thirst quencher Too Much T.V Storms
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Mayor Nagin Praises Bush, Blames Blanco
Noel Sheppard over at NEWSBUSTERS.ORG posts a partial transcript between Mayor Nagin and CNN's Soledad O'Brien where the Mayor appreciates Bush's reactions and expresses frustration with Governor Blanco's reticence. Nagin: I got promises too. I can't stand any more promises. I don't want to hear any more promises. I want to see stuff done. That's why I'm so happy the president came down here because I think they were feeding him a line of bull also. They were telling him things weren't as bad as it was, he came down and saw it and he put a general on the field. His name is general Honore. When he hit the field, we started to see action. What the state was doing, I don't friggin' know but I tell you, I am pissed. It wasn't adequate. The president and the governor sat down. Air force one, I said, Mr. President, Madam governor, you two have to get in sync. If you don't get in sync, more people are going to die. As much as it pains me to have to agree with Hilary Clinton, I wouldn't mind seeing a Katrina Commission put together to assess how this disaster was handled. Frankly, I don't care if everyone is given immunity from the git go. I seriously want to find out what went wrong (minus the hyperbole and media bias) and I want decisions to be made to prevent it from happening last time. If the Mayor and the Governor did not act quickly or efficiently enough to prepare for this storm, then I want measures in place to prevent that from happening again. I'll leave it to the more experienced to decide exactly what those measures are. If FEMA acted improperly or even if they simply failed to step up to the plate when the local government failed, then I want that addressed as well. If we need to change minds about how the Levee system should be constructed or Senator Landrieu needs more support in rebuilding the coastlines and wetlands, then that needs to be done as well. And I am sorry, but at the moment it honestly looks to me that the President certainly tried to push people to stay on the ball or to pass the ball to him at every opportunity.
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Still Not on the Same Page
From the Associated Press At a stop in Baton Rouge, Bush said all levels of the government were doing their best, and he pledged again: "So long as any life is in danger, we've got work to do. Where it's not going right, we're going to make it right." No tension? That's not how it comes across in *this* article. I wonder what the truth of the matter is. I would have expected the Governor to have begun working with the Administration by this point. It was Friday Night that President Bush first asked her to request a Federal takeover of the Evacuation that she and Mayor Nagin did not order until noon on Sunday. You would think that they would be working together by now.
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A Letter to Representative Schultz
After reading my local Congressional Representative's response to Hurricane Katrina, I felt compelled to write her a letter. Dear Representative Schultz,
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District Labyrinth
Seeing the boundaries of my Congressional District makes me wish I could have been a fly on the wall of THAT planning session.
You can download a PDF here with more detail, if you are interested.
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Tribes
Bill Whittle over at "Eject! Eject! Eject!" is one of the best Essayists in the blogosphere. He's been in our list of Favorite Feeds since we first started looking for feeds to populate our SharpReader with. His latest essay, "Tribes", is excellent reading. Normally I would quote a few choice tidbits to try and entice you into checking it out, but that would be a disservice to the compelling tension that Bill creates when he writes.
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Katrina Summary from Greg Richey
Greg Richey, a free-thread commenter over at Free Republic, wrote a very lengthy and detailed summary of events concerning Katrina over at Free Republic. If you have some time, it's worth it.
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How True
Today's comic by Cox and Forkum. Definitely keep these guys on your A-list, they're quite poignant.
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Wendy's Cosmo Blanco
Ever since our anniversary dinner at The Melting Pot, I have been striving to perfect a cocktail that Wendy fell in love with there. Tonight Wendy says that I have succeeded. :) It's not the same recipe that The Melting Pot uses, I am sure, so I don't feel guilty in calling it "Wendy's Cosmo Blanco", a white cranberry variation of the regular Cosmopolitan. WENDY'S COSMO BLANCO 2 Tablespoons vodka Frost your martini glass. Mix your ingredients and pour them over ice, Shake them vigorously, until you see foam. Strain into that frosty martini glass. Enjoy!
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A Federalist Precipice
In other news, the passing of Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist is a sad thing. A champion of State's rights, I worry not that the court will shift to the right with President Bush selecting two new Justices (Judge Rehnquist was one of the conservative anchors of the Supreme Court and Justice O'Connor was a swing vote that fell conservative more often than not) but instead wonder if the two new justices will be stalwart State's Rights champions. Watching the State of Confusion that is the State of Emergency in Louisiana, and how badly the local government and Federal government coordinated their efforts... ...I sense that we are on a sort of Federalist precipice. Will the role of the state diminish? Will the Federal government become stronger, swifter, bolder in its actions? I look at the ridiculous behavior between the states regarding wine sales and I wonder if a strong federal government is a bad thing.
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Vampires and Accountability
I'll admit it. The top of my closet is filled with vampire novels from stem to stern, from the trashy to the truly profound. I simply love the genre, and though there seems to be no shortage of writers, there also never seems to be enough. Some of my favorites, of course: Anne Rice, Laurel K. Hamilton, Charlaine Harris, Kim Harrison, Barb and JC Hendee, Vickie Taylor and MaryJanice Davidson. If you know of any others I should pick up, please fee free to send me a note! You can imagine my surprise and pleasure when I saw that Anne Rice had written a piece either for or picked up by the New York Times concerning the destruction of her home town, New Orleans. As always, it's an absolute must read with great insights and palpable detail. I was a little disappointed in her concluding point, however. Not in its veracity, certainly, but in the sharp and to the point finger that she points towards Congress, the Federal government and even America as a whole while at the same time defending Governor Blanco and Mayor Nagin. And where was everyone else during all this? Oh, help is coming, New Orleans was told. We are a rich country. Congress is acting. Someone will come to stop the looting and care for the refugees. To take this a step further, Anne Rice believes that America as a whole had turned their backs to what they perceived as "Sin City". But to my country I want to say this: During this crisis you failed us. You looked down on us; you dismissed our victims; you dismissed us. You want our Jazz Fest, you want our Mardi Gras, you want our cooking and our music. Then when you saw us in real trouble, when you saw a tiny minority preying on the weak among us, you called us "Sin City," and turned your backs. I'm sorry, but I can't agree with you on this one, Ms. Rice. I can't think of anyone that could or did "turn their backs" on the people of New Orleans. I perceive that there was mistake after mistake made in responding to this horrible disaster, but I don't think that any of it was motivated by a disdain for the people of New Orleans in any form, on any level. A horrible thing happened, and it is good and right to examine the root causes of what went wrong. Should, heaven forbid, anything even similar to this happen again, we want to be able to respond quickly and efficiently, sans erreurs. FOOD FOR THOUGHT:
Anyway, it is hours after I started this article and my wife is giving me evil glares; I promised her that I would help her with a few things before my parents come over for dinner. Over at Protein Wisdom, a great blog if there ever was one, Jeff Goldstein puts together a great summary of what happened from this point forward. Please, continue reading it over there. Once you have read everything (here and there) then you sort of understand what happened every step of the way. I have to admit, now that I have pieced together much of what happened and why, I don't feel any better. It was a huge process filled with human beings that made mistakes along the way. We need a more streamlined system that can still be run by people and not leave the potential for so many mistakes and power struggles to take place. ...is such a system the death-knell of State's power? In today's day an age, where even Standard Overnight with FedEx is not fast enough, where Instant Messaging has arisen to satiate a need to move even faster than e-mail... is such cooperation even possible? I'll end this echoing one of the comments that a reader made over at InstaPundit: Buried at the end of the WaPo's critical article on FEMA's decline is this crucial paragraph: ...which was exactly when they arrived in force. UPDATE 050904 2000hrs: One of the commenters over at Wizbang reveals that the order to use schoolbuses to assist in the evacuation came from the Governors office on Thursday, September 1st, the same day that National Guard troops began to arrive in force. UPDATE 050905 1019hrs: Gen Ralph Lupin of the National Guard was in charge of the Superdome shelter, and they seemed to have medical staff and some food on hand. The General was expecting 25k-35k refugees, was expecting the power to go out, had some sort of triage process in place to send the mo0re vulnerable to "other cities". So why did it look so different on the news? Why did it turn out to be so desperate and horrible if the Lousiana Guard was already there? Curtis Cockran, 54, a diabetic who recently had hip surgery, sat in his wheelchair on a loading dock at the dome while nurses, emergency technicians and doctors attended to refugees' needs. Here is more from the same AP article that that was drawn from, stating that the National Guard was being thorough in their search for weapons and contraband as people entered the Superdome: Guardsmen made able-bodied people clasp their hands behind their backs while they patted them down, feeling the seams and hems of clothing, then ran metal detectors over them. The backpacks, suitcases and plastic grocery bags that held their belongings were searched. Here is another article that has quotes from General Lupin citing an 11:00pm curfew, people that were forwarded to local hospitals, people that were forwarded to other local cities. UPDATE 050906 1921hrs: Reading the comments over at Protein Wisdom which point out an article over at NOLA.COM, it appears that the Friday that President Bush send Governor Blanco the memorandum asking her to cede authority of for the evacuation was in fact September 2nd. Governor Blanco hired James Witt on Saturday, September 3rd. According to the article at NOLA, the Federal Government had troops on the ground under their control during Hurricane Andrew in 1992 while the governor retained control of the National Guard, so this is not without precedent.
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Blamestorming Comments at Centerfield
Great comments by a reader named Tully over at Centerfield: NOLA had an evacuation plan. They didn't follow it. They had the resources and buses and authority to clear the city. They didn't use them. They assumed the levees would hold. They didn't. FEMA also assumed the levees had survived, and set up shop in NOLA Monday before the rain stopped--and were drowned out of their base in hours, costing nearly a day's delay in response. By the time the logistics routes into the area began to open up, New Orleans was flooded and the interior of the city unreachable.
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Tired of the Blame-O-Sphere
According to my father, who lived through it, it took 10 days for the National Guard to set up shop in the aftermath of Hurricane Andrew. Funny. I don't remember the vitriolic finger pointing and need to lay blame. I remember the community coming together: banks letting employees sleep in the lobby until they found a home, ice companies handing out free product and newspapers reporting it all, awed by the power of community. Yes, there was looting. I'm sure there was rape, murder and vile robbery as well ...but what did we remember the most about those times? I can't speak for everyone, but I remember reading and hearing about how my community encountered adversity and then rose above it: how we came together and beat the thing. I wish we could do the same now. Maybe we will and I am just frustrated because in today's environment we have the internet to amplify every tragic nuance to a deafening volume. Quite frankly, it's one of the biggest reasons why I have not written in a couple of days. Sitting in front of the TV, the computer, I am just overwhelmed at the devastation and disgusted by the new operating rules of the Blame-O-Sphere. Shut up, people. Roll up your sleeves, let's do the work, and from our newfound experience let's change the rules and make sure that we can respond to this better in the future. There isn't a single group that has not contributed to the failures and successes that we have and will experience here. All this blame is nothing but emotional distraction and deflection, and it isn't doing anything good for anyone.
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Tracking Family & Friends: News & E-Mail from Louisiana (Part 4)
More letters forwarded by Aunt Diana Thanks for all that news. Who are the students? Sounds like Jim & Alice have their hands full.
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Tracking Family & Friends: News & E-Mail from Louisiana (Part 3)
More letters forwarded from Aunt Diana: Michael this is from a friend in Washington D.C.
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Tracking Family & Friends: News & E-Mail from Louisiana (Part 2)
More letters forwarded from Aunt Diana: "Betty J. Boyd" wrote:
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Tracking Family & Friends: News & E-Mail from Louisiana (Part 1)
My father, who presently lives nearby here in Fort Lauderdale, spent a number of his childhood and early teenage years living in Venice, Louisiana. If you don't recognize the name of the town, don't be embarrassed, even today it has a population of about 2200 and encompasses 2.6 square miles of levee land south and east of New Orleans. Here are some photos of Buras, Venice, Boothville and the surrounding area after Hurricane Katrina. Dad's family eventually moved to Bastrop, Louisiana where two of his brothers still live today. Dad's sister, Diana, has been keeping close tabs on them in the aftermath of Katrina. She is sending us letters about family, friends and people we know in the affected area. I will be sharing them with my family and friends here on the blog. In addition to serving ourselves, maybe someone else will find information about someone or some place that they care about in the letters. I spoke with Jim today and he said they had found all the students they had been looking for in Pine Bluff at a campground. They are staying put as all the campgrounds are loaded to capacity. Of the eleven people that are at his house he thinks only one of them is going back to Austria. He expects that the rest will be there for awhile. They heard from Alice's sister's husband and he is driving a truck up above Lake Ponchitrain at a red cross shelter. He brings in supplies and leaves them at the camp. Since Alice's sister Margaret Ann and her husband are both retired they will be fine on income. Not as good for the other folks as they are out of jobs. Jim said the church is feeding many of the refugees tonight.
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Dan's News (Apple, Chimps, I Want my Suit Back)
Since everyone else is talking about the New Orleans problem, I will write about other stuff. "Taking a bite out of Apple" Apple is going to get whacked.. this could be good Chimps and Humans I really don't know why the scientists even bother to tell us this, it doesn't have anything to do with human evolution. This is like one of those fun facts that quaker oats puts on their paper pakages. I guess now that people are more concerned with the reckage in louisiana these people write about the finding of some chimp teeth without getting too much attention. I want my suit back! This is a good story for all you people who have studied NASA's history. I have found a large number of funny articles. Click here to read the articles What could go wrong The people that write these articles are insane!
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Katrina - How to Help
If you would like to donate your money or time, here is FEMA's list of charitable organizations helping victims of Hurricane Katrina.
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