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Lincoln Journal Star, December 30, 2006
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December 30, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in the Nebraska newspaper, the
Lincoln Journal Star:
Saddam Hussein dies on the gallows
By CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA and QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA
(The Associated Press)
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Saddam Hussein, the shotgun-waving dictator who ruled
Iraq with a remorseless brutality for a quarter-century and was driven
from power by a U.S.-led war that left his country in shambles, was
taken to the gallows and executed Saturday.
It was a grim end for the 69-year-old leader who had vexed three U.S.
presidents. Despite his ouster, Washington, its allies and the new
Iraqi leaders remain mired in a fight to quell a stubborn insurgency by
Saddam loyalists and a vicious sectarian conflict.
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Hartford Courant, December 30, 2006
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December 30, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in the
Hartford Courant:
Grim Era Ends
After Hussein Execution, Iraq's Future An Enigma
By SUDARSAN RAGHAVAN
(Washington Post)
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was hanged
shortly before dawn today for crimes against humanity in the mass
murder of Shiite men and boys in the 1980s. He was sent to the gallows
by a government backed by the U.S. and led by Shiite Muslims who had
been oppressed during his rule.
In the early morning, Hussein, 69, was escorted from his U.S. military
prison cell at Camp Cropper, near the Baghdad airport, and handed over
to Iraqi officials. He was executed on the day Sunni Muslims, of which
Hussein was a member, celebrate the Islamic festival of Eid al-Adha.
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The Honolulu Advertiser, December 30, 2006
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December 30, 2006: An excerpt from a story in
The Honolulu Advertiser:
Saddam Hussein executed
BY CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA and QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA
(The Associated Press)
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- In the end, Saddam Hussein died at the hands of those
he brutalized during a bloody regime that led Iraq into two disastrous
wars with the United States and left the country and its people in
utter chaos.
The 69-year-old former dictator, clutching a Quran, struggled as he was
taken from his cell but regained his composure as he was being led to
the execution room wearing a black hat, jacket and trousers. He refused
to have a hood placed over his head when executed before dawn for
crimes against humanity.
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New York Daily News, December 29, 2006
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December 29, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in the New York
Daily News:
Still rocking 'em at his final show
By AUSTIN FENNER, ADAM NICHOLS and NICOLE BODE
In a celebration truly befitting the Godfather of Soul, thousands of
fans danced, sang and lined the streets of Harlem yesterday in a
rousing homecoming for James Brown.
Chanting Brown's black power anthem "Say it Loud! I'm Black and I'm
Proud," and carrying signs depicting the soul legend's half-century of
boundary-breaking performances, people lined up for hours along 125th
St. for a chance to view Brown's casket at the Apollo Theater -- his
spiritual home and the place that launched him to superstardom.
"His music does something to your soul," said Marian Pressley, 53, a
retired nurse from midtown. "Every time, you got to move. That's why I
had to be here."
She waited on line from 4 a.m. until she entered the Apollo at 2:30 p.m.
Brown's 24-karat-gold casket was ferried to the Apollo by pair of white
horses leading a white-and-gold carriage on a 20-block trip down
Malcolm X Blvd. to 125th St. Pallbearers carried it inside the famed
theater, where Brown first set the stage aflame in 1956, fulfilling the
final wish of one of America's musical giants.
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The Detroit News, December 28, 2006
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December 28, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in
The Detroit News:
Graceful leader
By RICHARD A. RYAN
WASHINGTON --
Gerald R. Ford was president for 895 days. But he will be
remembered for two things: his grace as he helped calm a nation rocked
by scandal, and his pardoning of Richard Nixon.
America loved him for the first. It never quite forgave him for the second.
Ford, whose quiet self-confidence and reputation for honesty helped
lift the nation from its worst constitutional crisis in more than a
century, died Tuesday at his desert home in Rancho Mirage, Calif., at
age 93.
Although Ford was born in Nebraska, Michigan claimed him: The only
Michiganian to serve in the White House, he is expected to be buried
Wednesday on the grounds of the presidential museum in his beloved
Grand Rapids, which he represented in Congress from 1949-73.
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The New York Times, December 27, 2006
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December 27, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in
The New York Times:
Gerald Ford, 38th President, Dies at 93
By JAMES M. NAUGHTON and ADAM CLYMER
Former President Gerald R. Ford, who was thrust into the presidency in
1974 in the wake of the Watergate scandal but who lost his own bid for
election after pardoning President Richard M. Nixon, has died,
according to a statement issued late last night by his wife, Betty Ford.
He was 93, making him the longest living former president, surpassing Ronald Reagan, who died in 2004, by just over a month.
The statement did not give a cause, place or time of death, but Mr.
Ford, the 38th president, had been in and out of the hospital since
January 2006 when he suffered pneumonia, most recently in October at
the Eisenhower Medical Center in Rancho Mirage, Calif., for medical
tests. He returned to his home in Rancho Mirage after five days of
hospitalization.
"My family joins me in sharing the difficult news that Gerald Ford, our
beloved husband, father, grandfather and great grandfather has passed
away at 93 years of age," Mrs. Ford said in a statement issued from her
husband's office in Rancho Mirage, also the location of the Betty Ford
Center. "His life was filled with love of God, his family and his
country."
President Bush praised Mr. Ford for his contributions to the nation "in
an hour of national turmoil and division," in a statement released
early today from his ranch in Texas.
"With his quiet integrity, common sense, and kind instincts, President
Ford helped heal our land and restore public confidence in the
presidency," Mr. Bush said. "The American people will always admire
Gerald Ford's devotion to duty, his personal character, and the
honorable conduct of his administration."
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The Washington Post, December 27, 2006
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December 27, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in
The
Washington Post:
Gerald R. Ford, 93, Dies; Led in Watergate's Wake
By J.Y. SMITH and LOU CANNON
Gerald Rudolph Ford Jr., 93, who became the 38th president of the
United States as a result of some of the most extraordinary events in
U.S. history and sought to restore the nation's confidence in the basic
institutions of government, has died. His wife, Betty, reported the
death in a statement last night.
"My family joins me in sharing the difficult news that Gerald Ford, our
beloved husband, father, grandfather and great grandfather has passed
away at 93 years of age," Betty Ford said in a brief statement issued
from her husband's office in Rancho Mirage, Calif. "His life was filled
with love of God, his family and his country."
Ford died at 6:45 p.m. Tuesday (PST) at his home in Rancho Mirage,
Calif., about 130 miles east of Los Angeles, the Associated Press
reported. No cause of death was given. Ford had battled pneumonia in
January and underwent two heart treatments -- including an angioplasty
-- in August at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.
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The Grand Rapids Press, December 27, 2006
Image from newspaper's Web site
|
December 27, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in
The Grand Rapids Press:
Former President Gerald Ford dies at 93
By PAT SHELLENBARGER
Gerald R. Ford, Grand
Rapids' favorite son who restored dignity to the White House and helped
heal the wounds of Watergate and Vietnam, has died at the age of 93.
His death was announced late Tuesday by his wife, Betty.
"My family joins me in sharing the difficult news that Gerald Ford, our
beloved husband, father, grandfather and great grandfather has passed
away... ," Mrs. Ford said in a brief statement issued from her
husband's office in Rancho Mirage, Calif.
"His life was filled with love of God, his family and his country."
The statement did not say where Ford died or list a cause of death.
Ford had battled pneumonia in January 2006 and underwent two heart
treatments -- including an angioplasty -- in August at the Mayo Clinic
in Rochester, Minn.
He was the longest-living president, followed by Ronald Reagan, who
also died at 93. Ford had been living at his desert home in Rancho
Mirage, Calif., about 130 miles east of Los Angeles.
Ford, who represented the Grand Rapids area in Congress for 26 years,
is to be buried on the west bank of the Grand River next to the
museum
built in his honor. Specific funeral and burial plans had not yet been
announced.
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Los Angeles Times, December 27, 2006
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December 27, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in the
Los Angeles Times:
Gerald Ford dies at 93
Sworn in after Nixon resigned, new president helped nation recover
By ROBERT L. JACKSON
Gerald R. Ford, who as the 38th president of the United States helped
restore the nation's political stability after the trauma of the
Watergate scandal, has died, his widow, Betty, announced Tuesday night.
"My family joins me in sharing the difficult news that Gerald Ford, our
beloved husband, father, grandfather and great-grandfather, has passed
away at 93 years of age," the former first lady said in a brief
statement issued from her husband's office in Rancho Mirage. "His life
was filled with love of God, his family and his country."
He died at 6:45 p.m. Tuesday at his home in Rancho Mirage. No cause of death was released.
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The Augusta Chronicle, December 26, 2006
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December 26, 2006: An excerpt from a story in
The Augusta Chronicle:
James Brown 1933-2006
By DONNIE FETTER and BILL KIRBY
The Godfather of Soul is gone.
James Brown, the world renowned musical celebrity who never forgot his
hometown of Augusta, died unexpectedly Christmas morning in an Atlanta
hospital. He was 73.
....Longtime friend Charles Bobbit was by his side.
"People already know his history, but I would like for them to know he
was a man who preached love from the stage," Mr. Bobbit said.
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The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, December 26, 2006
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December 26, 2006: An excerpt from a story in The
Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
JAMES BROWN: 1933-2006
An American voice, a worldwide star
By BO EMERSON
When James Brown sat for sculptor John Savage, Savage knew what sort of
statue he wanted to create: a serious, classic, life-size bronze that
would occupy a place of honor in Brown's hometown of Augusta.
"Like any classic sculpture, there would be no smile on the face," said Savage.
Brown hated the idea.
"Asking him to sit there and look serious, he absolutely looked like he
was going to jump out of his skin, posing like that," said Savage. "He
told me that he was all about happiness and joy. He was a smiling man,
and he wanted a smile on his face."
There was joy in Augusta on May 6, 2005, when the statue was unveiled
at a downtown park very near the street that had been renamed James
Brown Boulevard. Thousands lined the streets for a dedication that was
a love fest between the town and its most famous son.
On the face of the 600-pound bronze: a smile as big as day. Even
bigger, and more blinding, was the smile on the guest of honor, James
Brown, who accepted the accolades from a city that had been slow to
celebrate the music legend.
Only the bronze smile remains now. James Brown, 73, died Monday of congestive heart failure.
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The New York Times, December 26, 2006
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December 26, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in
The New York Times:
Frank Stanton, Broadcasting Pioneer, Dies at 98
By HOLCOMB B. NOBLE
Frank Stanton, a central figure in the development of television
broadcasting in the United States and the industry’s most articulate
and persuasive spokesman during his nearly three decades as president
of
CBS, died Sunday afternoon at his home in Boston, a longtime friend, Elizabeth Allison, said.
He was 98 and had been in declining health, she said.
Dr. Stanton was the right-hand man of William S. Paley, the tycoon who
built the Columbia Broadcasting System empire from a handful of
struggling radio stations in 1928.
From 1946 to 1973, they operated as probably the greatest team in the
history of broadcasting, making CBS, for a time, the most powerful
communications company in the world, and the most prestigious. It was
under Dr. Stanton and Mr. Paley that CBS, mixing entertainment
programming with high-quality journalism and dashes of high culture,
earned its reputation as the Tiffany Network.
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The Denver Post, December 22, 2006
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December 22, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in
The Denver Post:
Stuck travelers fear a Christmas passed
By KELLY YAMONOUCHI
As many as 100,000
travelers may not make it home in time for the holidays.
Nearly half a million travelers were scheduled to fly into or out of
Denver International Airport on Wednesday, Thursday and today.
The midweek
blizzard that closed DIA disrupted the travel plans of nearly 300,000 of them.
United Airlines has canceled more than 2,000 flights. Frontier Airlines
canceled about 550 flights Wednesday and Thursday, with another 109
canceled this morning.
Even with DIA scheduled to open today, it will take days to reschedule
displaced passengers on planes that were nearly sold out before the
storm. Frontier flights leaving Saturday and Sunday, for example, were
booked 90 percent full or more. Spokesman Joe Hodas said those planes
will now fly at 100 percent capacity.
"It's awful," said Maday Carter, who lives in Lakewood and was
scheduled for a flight departing Thursday morning. "I'm totally
stranded."
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The Gazette, December 21, 2006
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December 21, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in the Colorado Springs newspaper,
The Gazette:
Blizzard shuts down the city, strands travelers
By ANTHONY LANE and R. SCOTT RAPPOLD
Colorado Springs came to a stop Wednesday. Travel stopped, work stopped, classes stopped, planes stopped.
Everything stopped except the snow and wind. And they won't stop until later today, forecasters said.
An unrelenting blizzard pummeled Colorado, closing Interstate 25 from
Wyoming to New Mexico, stranding drivers and airline passengers days
before Christmas and shutting schools, businesses and many government
offices.
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Newsday, December 20, 2006
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December 20, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in
Newsday:
Freedom Tower steel beams go up
By EMI ENDO
New York took a step toward restoring its skyline as workers erected the first two white columns of the
Freedom Tower at Ground Zero Tuesday.
"The steel rises, the Freedom Tower rises from the ashes of
September 11th
and the people of New York and the people of America can be proud,"
said George Pataki, on what was likely his final trip to the
World Trade Center site as New York's governor.
With a giant red crane, crews hoisted the first massive steel beam --
bearing the words "Freedom Tower" and a picture of an American flag --
onto the ground as Pataki, Mayor Michael Bloomberg and a host of other
officials looked on from a balcony.
Whistles and applause from the workers in hard hats went up as the
column, more than 30 feet tall and weighing nearly 25 tons, was bolted
in place.
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Seattle Post-Intelligencer, December 19, 2006
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December 19, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer:
Four in family die, generator suspected
By SCOTT GUTIERREZ and AMY ROLPH
BURIEN -- December's vicious windstorm claimed four more victims Monday
as family members were found dead inside their Burien home, likely
poisoned with fumes from a gas-operated generator in their garage.
A fifth victim was rushed to Harborview Medical Center, where he was in
critical condition from carbon monoxide poisoning, authorities said.
Monday's grim discovery pushed the storm's death toll to 12 -- six from
carbon monoxide poisoning, caused by gas-powered generators or charcoal
grills that residents fired up inside their homes to stay warm during
widespread power outages.
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The Oregonian, December 18, 2006
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December 18, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in
The Oregonian:
Grim news on mountain
By KIMBERLY A.C. WILSON, ERIC MORTENSON and ARTHUR GREGG SULZBERGER
Searchers found a climber's body Sunday in a snow cave near the summit
of Mount Hood, nine days after three mountaineers became lost.
Discovered at 3:20 p.m., the body was left overnight on the mountain.
The search for the remaining two climbers will resume today, the last
day of clear weather expected.
Authorities notified the climbers' families of the dead man's identity
Sunday night and planned to release it to the public this morning.
Climbers Brian Hall, 37, of Texas and Jerry "Nikko" Cooke, 36, of New
York, left Kelly James, 48, of Texas in a snow cave near the summit
Dec. 9 and went for help during a raging storm. A day later, James made
a four-minute cell phone call to his family, telling them he was not
faring well. The phone went dead Tuesday.
Mountain rescue groups began their search last Monday but were hampered
from going above 8,500 feet by days of high winds and heavy snow.
Sunday was the first clear day in a week, allowing two Black Hawk
helicopters and a Chinook from the Oregon National Guard's 1042nd Air
Ambulance Company to examine the top of Mount Hood and drop rescuers
there.
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Al Watan, December 14, 2006
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December 14, 2006:
Page One news from the Damascus, Syria newspaper,
Al Watan.
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San Jose Mercury News, December 13, 2006
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December 13, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in the
San Jose Mercury News:
Frank's fight: An explosion, a plunge into the unknown
By MARK EMMONS
Who had
Frank Sandoval become?
Where was the tough soldier who wouldn't quit?
Michelle Sandoval broke down in tears, her brave front shattered as she
tried to describe the man her husband had been before that awful day.
Frankie was someone who never gave up. He wouldn't make excuses and he
didn't accept them. He always encouraged their young daughter by
saying: I don't want to hear you say, "I can't." Just do it.
Now, she was watching him cry and plead those haunting words: I can't.
Frankie never would have done that before.
It was late January, and they had just arrived at the Veterans Affairs
hospital in Palo Alto. Frank could sit up in his wheelchair for only a
few minutes. He couldn't feel or control much of his left side. His
speech was nearly unintelligible.
And there was the more obvious evidence of his terrible wound: The right side of his head was sunken like a deflated basketball.
Frank now was a face of the modern war casualty. He had suffered a
traumatic brain injury -- the emblematic wound of the fighting in Iraq
and Afghanistan. These devastating injuries have forever altered the
lives of hundreds of U.S. soldiers and Marines, leaving their futures
uncertain.
Like Frank's.
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Anchorage Daily News, December 12, 2006
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December 12, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in the
Anchorage Daily News:
Alaska's Fallen Soldiers
Nearly 3,800 members of the Alaska-based 172nd Stryker Brigade Combat
Team left for Iraq in late summer 2005. It was the largest deployment
of Alaska-based soldiers since the Vietnam War.
Over the past three weeks, nearly all of them have returned to Fort
Wainwright outside Fairbanks, and Fort Richardson outside Anchorage.
Twenty-six members of the brigade died in Iraq. The fallen soldiers
will be honored today with the dedication of a memorial wall at Fort
Wainwright, followed by a redeployment ceremony at the Carlson Center
in Fairbanks.
We're publishing a tribute to all of the members of the brigade who died in Iraq, presented chronologically.
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Las Ultimas Noticias, December 11, 2006
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December 11, 2006: The Santiago, Chile newspaper,
Las Ultimas Noticias, reports on the death of Augusto Pinochet.
According to the
BBC
Web site: Chile's former military leader Augusto Pinochet has died at
the age of 91. He had been thought to be recovering after a heart
attack a week ago. Gen. Pinochet took power in a 1973 coup, and more
than 3,000 people were killed or "disappeared" in his 17-year rule.
He
was accused of dozens of human rights abuses as well as fraud but poor
health meant he never faced trial. No state funeral or national
mourning has been authorised. He will be buried with military honours
on Tuesday.
"The government has authorised flags to fly at
half-mast at army facilities," government spokesman Ricardo Lagos Weber
said. Thousands of anti-Pinochet protesters took to the streets in the
centre of the capital, Santiago, with tear gas and water cannon used to
disperse crowds.
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West Hawaii Today, December 8, 2006
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December 8, 2006: An excerpt from a story in
West Hawaii Today:
Pearl Harbor: 65th AnniversaryCommemorating the Greatest Generation
By AUDREY MCAVOY
The Associated Press
PEARL
HARBOR -- Pearl Harbor survivors paid what for many might be their
final tribute to fallen comrades in a dockside ceremony Thursday
marking the 65th anniversary of the Japanese attack, as historians
vowed to keep memory of the day alive for years to come.
"Will
all Pearl Harbor survivors please stand as able," implore Capt. Taylor
Skardon, commander of Naval Station Pearl Harbor, at the end of the
ceremony.
The veterans, most in Hawaiian aloha shirts and Pearl
Harbor survivor caps, were honored with prolonged applause at the
solemn ceremony near where some of the sunken ships remain rusting and
moss-covered under the harbor's waters.
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The Washington Post, December 7, 2006
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December 7, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in
The Washington Post:
Iraq Panel Proposes Major Strategy ShiftStudy Group Calls for New Diplomacy, Greater Advisory Role for U.S. Military
By MICHAEL ABRAMOWITZ and ROBIN WRIGHT
A
panel of prominent elder leaders yesterday offered a stinging
assessment of virtually every aspect of the U.S. venture in Iraq and
called for a reshaping of the American military presence and a new
Middle East diplomatic initiative to prevent the country from sliding
into anarchy.
The long-awaited report from the bipartisan Iraq
Study Group, co-chaired by former secretary of state James A. Baker III
and former Indiana congressman Lee H. Hamilton, said that the focus of
U.S. troops in Iraq should shift from combat to training Iraqi soldiers
and police, and that all combat brigades not necessary for force
protection could be withdrawn by early 2008.
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Richmond Times-Dispatch, December 6, 2006
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December 6, 2006: An excerpt from a story in the
Richmond Times-Dispatch:
Gates Appears Headed for Confirmation By ROBERT BURNS
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
-- With a frankness that won praise from Democrats and Republicans
alike, Robert Gates, the former CIA director, maneuvered through five
hours of nonconfrontational Senate questioning and appeared headed for
certain confirmation to replace Donald H. Rumsfeld as secretary of
defense.
He raised some eyebrows by stating bluntly that the
United States is not winning in Iraq, contradicting President Bush, who
said at an Oct. 25 news conference, "Absolutely, we're winning." But
Gates later stressed that the U.S. also is not losing, and that the
setbacks have been more political than military.
After the
Senate Armed Services Committee voted 24-0 on Tuesday to recommend
Gates be confirmed, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn.,
announced that floor debate on the nomination would begin Wednesday.
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Dallas Morning News, December 5, 2006
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December 5, 2006: An excerpt from a story in
The Dallas Morning News:
Another Giant LeapNASA wants to build permanent lunar outpost as way station for space exploration
By MARC KAUFMAN
The Washington Post
NASA
unveiled plans yesterday to set up a small and ultimately
self-sustaining settlement of astronauts at the south pole of the moon
sometime around 2020 -- the first step in an ambitious plan to resume
manned exploration of the solar system.
The long-awaited
proposal envisions initial stays of a week by four-person crews,
followed by gradually longer visits until power and other supplies are
in place to make a permanent presence possible by 2024.
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Manila Standard Today, December 4, 2006
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December 4, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in the Philippine newspaper, the
Manila Standard Today:
'A national emergency' President
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo declared a state of national emergency
yesterday to speed up the release of P1 billion to the areas struck by
typhoon Reming, which killed 309 people and left hundreds more missing
when it slammed into the country last Thursday.
"All resources
of the government will continue to be mobilized as we hope against hope
on the search for survivors," Mrs. Arroyo said.
She said she
had ordered the budget department to release money from the calamity
fund to rehabilitate Bicol and Southern Luzon, the same areas
devastated by typhoons Milenyo and Paeng.
The Navy said it had mobilized a team to transport relief goods to Mindoro and Bicol.
Hopes
virtually vanished yesterday for finding survivors of typhoon-triggered
mudslides that engulfed entire villages, and the Red Cross feared the
death toll could reach 700.
The National Disaster Coordinating
Council reported that 309 bodies had been retrieved and 298 people
remained missing three days after Reming -- international name Durian
-- struck, triggering mudslides in worst-hit Albay.
The storm affected more than 830,000 people, officials said.
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Tulsa World, December 1, 2006
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December 1, 2006: An excerpt from a
story in the Oklahoma newspaper, the
Tulsa World:
Snow day leaves kids in charge By MICHAEL OVERALL
From
a distance, under a bulky coat and winter cap, with sleet and snow
swirling in the air as thick as fog, a 13-year-old girl can look 30.
Especially when she's carrying a laundry basket, as if she darted outside in the middle of chores.
But
no, Meiah King isn't the mom. Up close, with a lock of auburn hair
sneaking out the front of her hat, she turns out to be a kid. And that
empty laundry basket is a makeshift sled, with Meiah folding herself
into it before her brother pushes her downhill in their Florence Park
neighborhood.
Her authoritative posture -- heads up, shoulders
square, one hand on her hip -- comes from the simple fact that Meiah is
the oldest on the block, and therefore in charge of keeping the younger
kids from sledding in front of traffic.
"It's more ice than snow," she says. "That just makes it faster."
A winter storm can obliterate authority figures as fast as it can cover traffic lanes.
School
is canceled. Parents leave for work. Baby sitters can't make it,
leaving the city's underage population largely on its own.