| Corrections and clarifications
The theater provided incorrect information. 1/8/08 A recipe Sunday in the Entrée section for Muskego Lakes Country Club Greenbriar Stuffed Chicken misstated the amount of diced onion to be used. The recipe calls for 1/8 of a cup of finely diced yellow onion, not 8 cups. *** An Associated Press article Jan. 1 about the release from prison of Sara Jane Moore, who attempted to kill President Ford in 1975, incorrectly stated that she was involved with the Symbionese Liberation Army. Moore was involved with leftist political causes in the San Francisco Bay area at the time, but her former defense attorney, Frank Bell, says he knows of no connection between Moore and the SLA. 1/5/08 An article Friday about school board elections in the Washington-Caldwell and Waterford Graded districts misstated the deadline for candidates to file papers.
Russian bombers to test-fire missiles in Bay of Biscay
Putin is a smart guy and knows his real lever in Europe is energy, but he also needs to make noise with his military once in a while. If push really came to shove, his military wouldn't last an hour against NATO and he knows it. The only credible weapon he still has is the nuclear tipped ballistic missile, and that isn't a credible threat from anyone but a nutcase (of which Putin clearly is not). These maneuvers are for domestic consumption, because I don't think anyone in the US/NATO military is honestly scared of 1950's prop bombers. For the outside world, this is more like an old fat guy strutting around in a Speedo..... .
N.S. bylaw will ban smoking in cars with kids
For two generations and millions of tax dollars it is clear that anti-tobacco organizations have completely failed and now are off-loading their responsibillity to the police with by-laws of this type. If these advocates knew what they were doing then these measures would not be needed. To date the media (with advertising bans), convenience stores and bars are doing the work of anti-tobacco advocates. Oddly, those that do the work are the only ones that don't get government funding. Anti-tobacco advocacy is a disgrace and these incompetents should no longer get a penny of tax funding. If anti-tobacco advocacy is failing because they are constantly being outsmarted by tobacco companies, then there is a simple solution. Fire all of the stupid anti-tobacco advocates and replace them with people that can actually do the work.
Collins quits Hibs 'after spending plea rebuffed'
And, no, he can't be Scotland manager. Can he?There is no way in the world we'll be successful if he's going to bring in his "pass at all costs" approach to the national team. We ain't good enough to take that approach, the big nations would have a field day! .
Morristown bike plan rolling forward
This month, Morristown is officially initiating the development of a bicycle plan for our town. On February 21, the Morristown Environmental Commission is holding the first Bicycle Planning Steering Committee Meeting to develop a vision for bicycling in Morristown and identify what needs to be in the Bicycle Plan. The Steering Committee includes representatives from the Town Council, the Planning Board, The Morristown Partnership, and citizen representatives for the four wards. We still need someone to represent the 2nd Ward. Last year, the Environmental Commission held a preliminary public meeting to educate the public about bicycle facilities that are possible in Morristown. We also conducted a survey of approximately 300 people on bicycle and pedestrian use in Morristown.
Alabama station drops broadcast of 60 Minutes expose on political ...
I contacted CBS News in New York and was told that 'there is no delicate way to put this: the WHNT claim is not true. There were no transmission difficulties. The problems were peculiar to Channel 19, which had the signal and had functioning transmitters.' I was told that the decision to blacken screens across Northern Alabama 'could only have been an editorial call.'" WHNT, Channel 19 of Huntsville, Alabama, issued a press release shortly after the broadcast. We apologize that you missed the first segment of 60 Minutes tonight featuring "The Prosecution of Don Siegelman." It was a techincal (sic) problem with CBS out of New York. We are working (click to read rest) with them right now to see if we can re-broadcast the segment. Please be patient with us during this time.
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