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Friday, Feb 15, 2002

barnyards

"tv barns new tv documentary page"

[link]


pass the hat

"Campaign Inflation Industry pumped in a record 696 million dollars to elect George W. Bush and a GOP Congress. The Mother Jones 400 reveals the nation's top contributors -- and what they expect in return."

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essay sheik

"In this first of three reports from Saudi Arabia, Elizabeth Farnsworth explores a country and culture that has remained inaccessible to most foreigners until just recently."

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bugging out

"Chinese President Jiang Zemin believes fellow Politburo member Li Peng is behind the planting of electronic listening devices aboard the president's new U.S. jetliner, according to a (not so) classified State Department intelligence report."

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hard times

"Prominent Campaign Finance Reform Proposals Would Not Have Reduced Enron's or Andersen's Political Spending "

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mission scrub

"On 9-9-01 - just two days before Osama Bin Laden's attack on the US - the NY Times published a lengthy and chilling article about Osama Bin Laden by reporter John Burns. Some time after 9-11, the Times SCRUBBED this article, replacing it with a completely different article that Burns wrote on 9-12."

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Thursday, Feb 14, 2002

b-list

""I didn't agonize over it," the vice president breezily tells the Post. Neither, apparently, did Woodward. But Dana Milbank might have. By general consensus, Milbank -- one of the Post's two White House correspondents -- is the administration's least-favorite journalist. And it's not hard to see why. Over the past year or so, Milbank, who previously covered the White House for The New Republic, has broken a number of stories that made life difficult for Bush. Last summer, he exhumed an administration plan to exempt the Salvation Army from state and local antidiscrimination laws -- a major embarrassment to Bush aide Karl Rove, who played a central role in the discussions. Milbank also broke early stories about the vice president's secret energy-task-force meetings (which prompted angry phone calls from Congress) and Bush's decision to abandon school vouchers (which prompted angry calls from conservatives)."

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news is not free

"NEW YORK -- Last year, many newspapers were considering shutting off free access to their Web sites -- "closing the floodgates," as at least one publisher put it. But there seems to be less interest in shutting those doors these days."

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yellow roses

"George W. Bush is trying to rewrite the history of his and his family’s relationship with Enron Corp.’s disgraced former Chairman Kenneth Lay. So far, Bush has enjoyed fairly good success as the U.S. news media has largely accepted the White House spin."

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full of sheet

"Bankers at Citigroup (news/quote), Credit Suisse First Boston and Deutsche Banc Alex. Brown found ways for Enron to remove lagging assets from its balance sheet by selling bonds backed by Enron's stock.

After hatching that idea, some of those bankers took it on the road and sold it to other corporations that wanted to make their financial statements look better, too."

[link]