Search for Minn. brothers enters 3rd day
Friday 30th of July 2010 05:52:39 AM
Posted by admin / Under Avery Hopwood
| RED LAKE, Minn. - Dozens of trained searchers were taking to woods, lakes and air Friday to hunt for two young brothers who disappeared from an American Indian reservation two days earlier. The FBI offered a $20,000 reward for information leading to the recovery of Tristan Anthony White, 4, and Avery Lee Stately, 2. The boys were reported missing Wednesday from the Walking Shield area of the remote, heavily wooded Red Lake Indian Reservation in northern Minnesota, the FBI said. Their parents said they had been playing outside their home before they disappeared, Tribal Chairman Floyd "Buck" Jourdain Jr. said.... |
THE ESSENTIAL NEED FOR CAPITAL PUNISHMENT
Friday 30th of July 2010 05:52:39 AM
Posted by admin / Under Avery Hopwood
| THE ESSENTIAL NEED FOR CAPITAL PUNISHMENT by Timothy Rollins, Editor and Publisher March 3, 2006 WARNING: This DOUBLE-LENGTH article contains material that is brutally and even horrifically graphic. This is not recommended reading for children, those with weak stomachs, or those whose sensitivities may be destroyed by so doing. Neither this author nor The American Partisan will be considered liable for either the contents of this article or the reaction of its readers to viewing, reading or hearing it. Think it over VERY CAREFULLY before deciding to proceed past this point.If there was ever a case begging for capital punishment-despite... |
Here are 10 good reasons why the global-warming issue can be put to rest
Friday 30th of July 2010 05:52:39 AM
Posted by admin / Under Avery Hopwood
| Yes: Here are 10 good reasons why the global-warming issue can be put to rest Monday, December 19, 2005 DENNIS T. AVERY The Kyoto Protocol has died. None of its supporters has cut carbon-dioxide emissions, and their big Montreal meeting this month failed again to agree on future cuts. With apologies to David Letterman, the top 10 reasons to rejoice over the death of Kyoto are: (10) Wind farms are expensive and really ugly. They kill birds and bats. Nor do they produce much electricity when really needed, during daylight hours. Kyoto would have planted them over huge stretches (9)... |
Halbach Case Leads To Call For State Death Penalty
Friday 30th of July 2010 05:52:39 AM
Posted by admin / Under Avery Hopwood
| The Teresa Halbach murder has a state senator hoping to expand a proposal to reinstate Wisconsin's death penalty. < snip> Lasee says the Halbach case is so gruesome that he now wants to amend the referendum to apply to any vicious murder with DNA evidence. American Civil Liberties Union spokesman Peter Kellogg opposes the move, saying it would lead to a continued broadening of cases in which the death penalty could apply. Wisconsin lawmakers repealed capital punishment in 1853. It's one of 14 states without the death penalty. |
WSJ: Class-Action Common Sense - The benefits of the big State Farm reversal.
Friday 30th of July 2010 05:52:39 AM
Posted by admin / Under Avery Hopwood
| ...In the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's annual list of jurisdictions with the worst litigation environment, Illinois is home to three of the top 15 counties: Madison, Le Clair and Cook (Chicago). So it's nice to see that the Supreme Court of Illinois has decided to rein in a local judge.... In a welcome display of common sense, a 6-0 court last week reversed a $1.05 billion judgment against State Farm Insurance Co. The case-- Avery v. State Farm-- was ostensibly about the parts used to repair cars covered under State Farm policies. The policies specified the use of "non-original equipment,"... |
Bin Laden videotape sways some voters, but not others
Friday 30th of July 2010 05:52:39 AM
Posted by admin / Under Avery Hopwood
| Posted on Sun, Oct. 31, 2004 Bin Laden videotape sways some voters, but not others By Larry Eichel and Sandy Bauers Inquirer Staff Writers For Robert Blose, a retired steelworker who lives in Kutztown, seeing Osama bin Laden on TV yesterday was all it took to end his days as one of Pennsylvania's remaining undecided voters. "I'm going to vote for President Bush," said Blose, 61, "because I think he's the better person to protect us. I'm sure a lot of other people are going to feel the same way. It makes a difference." But in nearby Reading, another undecided... |



