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Microsoft to launch online store
Posted 7/12/2004 5:20 PM
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/2004-07-12-ms-online-store_x.htm?POE=TECISVA
SEATTLE (AP) — Microsoft is planning an online store to sell Windows-compatible products — and promoting it in prime real estate right on the Windows XP start menu.
The Redmond, Wash.-based software giant said Monday that it plans a fall launch for Windows Marketplace, a shopping and downloading site that will allow users to buy hardware and software for use with Microsoft's dominant Windows operating system.
Microsoft and its partner, CNET Networks, won't actually sell the products directly, said Susanne Peterson, a director in Microsoft's Windows group.
Instead, the site will provide customer reviews and other information about computers, software and other gadgets, and links to online merchants such as Circuit City or Best Buy, where the consumer can make purchases, she said.
Previously, Microsoft offered Windows Catalog in its start menu, which described some products but didn't offer any links to merchants.
Windows Marketplace will immediately get a boost from high-profile promotion on the company's Windows XP start menu and its dominant Internet Explorer browser. Microsoft said millions of customers will be exposed to the promotion.
Safa Rashtchy, an analyst with Piper Jaffray who follows e-commerce, said he didn't expect leading online retailers like Amazon.com to lose sleep worrying that the new offering could encroach on their business.
"So far in the e-commerce space we have not seen a competitive product from Microsoft," he said, and he doesn't expect this one to be any more of a threat.
BOREALIS
Robot uses minesweeping technology to clean rugs
Last modified: July 12, 2004, 1:08 PM PDT
By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
The Roomba robotic vacuum cleaner has a new mission: to seek and destroy.
Burlington, Mass.-based iRobot came out with a new line of robotic vacuum cleaners Monday that, according to the company, feature longer battery life, overall improved performance and an ability to detect dirt.
When the robot drives across a particularly dirty patch of carpet or floor, sensors begin to "listen" to dirt through a vibration detector. The navigation system then steers the robot in circles in the area to eradicate all of the vibration anomalies, at which point the robot resumes its normal course.
Although robotics has not lived up to some of the hype and promise of the last two decades, the market has begun to develop, thanks to improved technology and a change of thinking on how and where robots will be most useful.
Most companies now are no longer trying to develop humanoid companions. Instead, they are developing mobile units that can go into dangerous areas--such as sewer pipes or nuclear power plants--or that can perform repetitive, often menial tasks.
iRobot, which spun out of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, develops robots for both types of applications. The company has created a number of reconnaissance robots for the military, including the PackBot, a robotic minesweeper being used in Afghanistan.
On the other end of the spectrum, the Roomba cleans up the living room and, in all likelihood, could not be used by a mad scientist to take over the Earth. Still, the products share a common heritage. The navigation algorithms and the sensor technology that allow the Roomba to avoid falling down stairs or running into obstacles come from the company's government work, according to a spokeswoman.
"It is a minesweeper for dirt," she said.
The first model of the Roomba, which carries a price tag of $199, has sold more than 500,000 units, according to the company.
The new Roomba Discovery sells for $249 and comes equipped with the Dirt Detect technology, a home base that it scurries to for recharging, and a bag that holds three times as much dirt as bags for previous models. The new battery charges in three hours and can last two hours, and design modifications allow the new Roomba to shift more easily from hardwood to carpet.
A scaled-down version called Roomba Red sells for $149.
The vacuums are now available on the iRobot Web site and will be sold in the fall at retailers such as Target, Bed Bath & Beyond, Best Buy, Macy's and Amazon.com.
http://news.com.com/Robot+uses+minesweeping+technology+to+clean+rugs/2100-1041_3-5266231.html?tag=st...
BOREALIS
Symantec snaps up antispam firm
Last modified: July 12, 2004, 4:19 PM PDT
By Stefanie Olsen
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Security company Symantec has acquired antispam specialist TurnTide for $28 million in cash, a sign of further consolidation among makers of e-mail filters.
News of the acquisition, which has not been announced publicly, was posted to TurnTide's Web site on Monday. Symantec confirmed the acquisition and said it had been finalized on Thursday.
Conshohocken, Penn.-based TurnTide was spun off only six months ago from ePrivacy Group, a privacy protection consultancy. TurnTide, which has 20 employees, sells a router-based technology that filters out unwanted e-mail and viruses at the edge of corporate networks.
"We're looking to provide a broad security solution that will protect against different types of threats to corporate networks," Symantec spokeswoman Linda Smith Munyan said. TurnTide's technology will be part of a multitier antispam line-up that includes Brightmail and other products from Symantec, she added.
The TurnTide deal comes only two months after Symantec bought Brightmail for $370 million, preempting the San Francisco-based company's plans for an initial public offering. Brightmail, the largest maker of spam-fighting software, reported a net income of about $1.1 million on revenue of $26 million in 2003, compared with a net loss of $5.2 million on revenue of $12.1 million in 2002, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Once known mostly for its Norton AntiVirus tools, Symantec is extending its product lines to include security and antispam software, services and hardware. It competes with the likes of Ironport Systems, Microsoft, Sophos and Frontbridge.
The TurnTide deal underscores the importance of technologies that can stanch junk e-mail at the router level, before it reaches e-mail in-boxes. Initially, antispam products focused on detecting junk mail by looking for words or phrases commonly found in spam and setting filters to block messages containing these. While that approach is still baseline, products based on other techniques are now available. Some companies now sell protection for the mail server that bounces unwanted messages before they reach in-boxes. Others set up spam and virus filters in gateway servers, which are proxies set up between the Internet and mail servers. Using these eases the stress on the network of processing spam filters.
TurnTide goes a step further with its Anti-Spam Router, a hardware and software package. Working at the edge of the network, or the point at which a corporate network connects to the Internet, the antispam router looks at the actual packets of information in messages and determines which ones are likely to have come from a spammer. Using features inherent in the TCP/IP, it can limit the amount of traffic being sent from these sources.
Symantec said that it expects to continue to support existing TurnTide customers through the transition period. The company, based in Cupertino, Calif., also said it is "assessing" the staff needs of TurnTide, but plans to keep key engineering and sales people.
http://news.com.com/Symantec+snaps+up+antispam+firm/2100-7355_3-5266548.html?tag=st_lh
BOREALIS
Google registers to list on Nasdaq
Last modified: July 12, 2004, 12:06 PM PDT
By Stefanie Olsen
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Google has registered to be listed on the Nasdaq stock exchange for its upcoming $2.7 billion initial public offering, it said in a regulatory filing Monday.
The Mountain View, Calif.-based search company, which filed to go public in late April, had not previously disclosed information on its chosen stock exchange, and it has yet to propose a trading symbol.
Google's filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission indicates the end of a duel between the Nasdaq and the New York Stock Exchange, staunch rivals that were clamoring to host the technology IPO, one of the most widely anticipated this year.
Stock exchanges not only collect healthy fees from registrants, they gain renown from the clout of their listed companies. The Nasdaq is largely known for its technology constituency, which has been battered by a slump of late. Having Google on board could lift its stature.
"Google is an outstanding company with a great management team, and we wish the company well with its initial public offering," the NYSE said in a statement Monday. The Nasdaq could not immediately be reached for comment.
Google filed with the SEC on April 29 to raise about $2.7 billion in a stock sale later this year. Google's lead underwriters are Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse First Boston. In May, the search company named 26 additional bankers, including Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan Chase and Lehman Brothers. It has removed Merrill Lynch from the list.
The search company plans to sell shares via an open auction process, in hopes of leveling the playing field for smaller investors. Typically, institutional investors run the show in an IPO, setting the share price of an offered stock and allocating shares to parties of their choice. Google's IPO is designed to allow interested investors to bid for shares at the price they're willing to pay, and the highest bid wins.
No date has been set for the stock offering. Investors will need to have an account with one of the underwriters.
BOREALIS
Reagan's son to speak at Dem convention
Posted 7/12/2004 8:54 AM
WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrats have snagged a high-profile speaker — and a measure of political one-upmanship — for this month's convention: Ron Reagan.
Ron Reagan Jr. speaks at a ceremony for his father, former U.S. President Ronald Reagan, at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library on June 11.
By Carlo Allegri, Getty Images
The younger son of the late President Reagan will address the Democratic National Convention in Boston about stem cell research.
David Wade, a spokesman for Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, said Monday that Reagan will have a "prime time" speaking slot during the July 26-29 convention. "Ron Reagan's courageous pleas for stem cell research add a powerful voice to the millions of Americans hoping for cures for their children, for their parents and for their grandparents," Wade said.
Reagan, 46, has been critical of the Bush administration's restriction of federal funding for human embryonic stem cell research and the war in Iraq.
But he said his speech will only deal with the subject of stem cell research, something he and Nancy Reagan have argued could lead to cures for a number of diseases like the Alzheimer's that afflicted the late president. Because the extraction of stem cells destroys day-old embryos, the process is opposed by groups who link it to abortion.
"If they had asked me to say a few words about throwing George Bush out of office, I wouldn't do it," Reagan told The Philadelphia Inquirer. "This gives me a platform to educate people about stem cell research."
BOREALIS
Performance art for the desktop
Form fuses with function in this optical mouse from Microsoft and French designer Philippe Starck.
Posted 7/12/2004 12:11 PM
Gannett News Service
What happens when you let French designer Philippe Starck design a mouse for Microsoft? You get a silver mouse with a glowing blue (or orange) stripe down its middle. The two-button optical wired mouse also features a scroll wheel and a hemisphere-like shape designed to fit comfortably in the palm of your hand. The Optical Mouse by S+ARCK plugs into a Universal Serial Bus (USB) port on a PC or a Mac. It goes on sale in August for $35.
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>>Senator Al FRANKEN.... That does have a ring to it !!
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Some people use a weapon...some shoot off their mouth !!
BOREALIS
AAPL -- Apple Reinvention Transforms Stock Value
Sat Jul 10, 2004 08:59 AM ET
By Duncan Martell
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The more than 50 percent rise in Apple Computer Inc.'s stock price this year has mirrored the brisk sales of its market-leading iPod digital music player and growth at its retail stores.
In the view of some analysts, the share price's ascent also reflects a transformation in the way investors are willing to value the Cupertino, California-based company, innovator of the first operating system to make personal computers friendly to everyday users.
Once seen as a value play that traded at little above its cash value, Apple's stock is now attracting long-term and momentum investors sold on Chief Executive Steve Jobs' vision of the company as a high-margin style-setter at the hub of an emerging "digital lifestyle."
Momentum investors typically look at trading patterns of stocks and the amount of money flowing into and out of them, while value investors tend to look for companies that are undervalued relative to their competitors.
Apple (AAPL.O: Quote, Profile, Research) has sold more than 3 million of its market-leading iPod digital music players since their introduction in October 2001, and the company is approaching the 100 million mark on the number of tracks purchased on its iTunes online music store at 99 cents each.
"Longer-term investors are looking at it right now and saying Apple's got these great products out there and more coming and we trust them," said analyst Shannon Cross at Cross Research, while noting that there are now likely a sizable number of momentum investors in Apple.
The stock took a hit last week when the company announced plans for a next-generation iMac desktop computer, but said that it would miss its own internal schedule and won't ship the new one until September. The resulting sell-off took the shares down from their highest levels since 1999 and analysts reiterated their "buy" ratings, urging clients to take advantage of the price dip.
Even though the company's share of the PC market has been declining steadily in recent years and is now at about 2 percent worldwide, the company has built two sizable businesses in the past three years: the iPod franchise and its retail stores.
"It's a different kind of company you're buying today than you were four years ago when you were buying this PC company that you hoped would be able to reverse their losses in PC market share," said Dan Niles, chief executive of Neuberger Berman Technology Management, who owns Apple shares.
Niles said that Apple's 80 stores now account for $1 out of every $7 the company generates, and the stores boast gross margins of 40 percent. "It could be one of the biggest profit generators in the future," Niles said.
The maker of the Macintosh computer and iPod digital music players in its most recent quarter reported net income that more than tripled and gave a forecast that was above even the most optimistic expectations at the time.
Also, for the first time, the company sold more iPods in a quarter than its signature Mac computers, and iPod sales for that quarter even surpassed sales during the quarter that included the holiday shopping season.
Shares of Apple now trade at a lofty 50 times the fiscal 2004 per-share estimates of 61 cents a share calculated by analysts polled by Reuters Estimates. The stock trades at 37 times estimated fiscal 2005 per-share profit estimates and 34 times fiscal 2006 estimates.
Apple's stock is trading at about $30.25, down from a high above $32 in late June but still up sharply from a low near $19.70 in December.
"Part of it is betting on Steve Jobs," said technology analyst Tim Bajarin of Creative Strategies, of the stock's rise. "Even though the Mac size of the business has not grown rapidly, he keeps pulling interesting rabbits out of his hat."
While the stock may appear overvalued given its strong performance this year, some investors believe the shares are likely to end the year still higher.
"You can make the argument that the valuation looks like it's getting stretched, but there are some very large upside possibilities in the third and fourth quarters," Niles said.
Since the introduction in January of the iPod mini, Apple hasn't been able to keep up with demand, but Niles said production will ramp later this summer as supplies of the tiny 1-inch drives the mini uses increase.
"The stock's had a nice run but we haven't taken our buy off the stock because we think there are still legs to the Apple story," Cross said.
Jobs agrees.
"We think that strategy still has a lot of legs," Jobs said in a recent interview, referring to the digital lifestyle. "If investors are catching up with us, that's terrific and hopefully they'll continue to follow us."
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=technologyNews&storyID=5635004
BOREALIS
Microsoft Working to Improve Office Search
Fri Jul 9, 2004 05:07 AM ET
SEATTLE (Reuters) -
Microsoft Corp. is working to include newer search technology in its Office family of applications, group vice president Jeff Raikes said on Thursday.
Microsoft, which is developing is own search technology to challenge No. 1 Web search provider Google Inc., is also working on ways to allow users to easily find information stored on hard drives, such as documents, e-mails and data files.
Google is also reportedly working on similar technology to allow faster and more relevant searches of information stored on personal computers.
"We are collaborating together across groups," Raikes told a group of reporters, adding that existing search functions within Office programs were already advanced enough to deliver relevant information to users.
Asked if the Office division, which Raikes oversees, was pursuing a specific search strategy, Raikes said that there was no specific effort, but that his group was working with Microsoft Research and other divisions to enhance information retrieval in Office.
Office is Microsoft's second-largest division after Windows, offering a system of programs for business tasks. As a result, it generates and retrieves much of the information stored on computer hard drives.
Third-party software providers, such as Lookout Software, have attracted a large following of users by offering an add-on to Outlook, Microsoft's e-mail, contacts and scheduling program, that allows faster and more efficient searches of such information.
Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft's research arm has also been working on an information retrieval technology called "Stuff I've Seen" that gives users an instant snapshot of information that they have used on a PC.
Asked if search functions would be integrated with Office, Raikes said that his group was "always working" on improving the functionality of Office and was not working on a specific timeframe to compete against Google.
Search experts have identified local hard drive search as the next battleground among search providers.
X1 Technologies Inc. is offering a $99 software program called X1 Search that indexes and delivers nearly instant search results of information stored on hard drives, including e-mail and attachments. X1 was conceived by Idealab founder Bill Gross.
BOREALIS
Go to Space Cheap -- with One Catch
Mon Jul 12, 2004 08:38 AM ET
By Ben Berkowitz
"Oddly Enough"
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -
You don't need $20 million to be a space tourist anymore.
Just $1,000 will put you in orbit -- or at least a gram of your incinerated remains.
After a three-year hiatus, privately held Space Services Inc. is poised to resume service in September launching containers full of people's ashes into space, where they will circle the Earth for years to come.
"We're hopefully 65 to 90 days away from the largest ever space funeral launch," Charles Chafer, president and chief executive of Houston-based Space Services, told Reuters on Friday.
Chafer said the upcoming launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California would carry the partial remains of up to 150 people. The launch will also be the first-ever flight of the Falcon, a low-cost reusable rocket developed with the backing of Internet entrepreneur Elon Musk.
Though cremation is increasingly acceptable in the United States -- U.S. cremation rates quadrupled from 1972 to 1996-- Chafer said one-third of his customers come from Japan, where cremation rates remain far higher.
The cost for sending a larger container with 7 grams of cremated remains is $5,300.
The company also offers a video of the launch and provides software that allows families to track the orbital location of their loved ones' remains in real time.
The last funeral flight, in September 2001, failed to reach orbit, but three prior launches did.
The company pledges a free relaunch if the first attempt fails. Chafer said the families of 48 of the 50 people whose remains were on the last flight had opted for another attempt.
"The key to the business is the routine access to space," Chafer said, adding the company planned to make three to four launches a year if the Falcon program proves successful.
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=oddlyEnoughNews&storyID=5644351
BOREALIS
Man Dodges Suicide Pact with Bride
Mon Jul 12, 2004 08:21 AM ET
"Oddly Enough"
TEHRAN (Reuters) -
An Iranian man who struck a suicide pact with his new bride over their guilt for having pre-marital sex is being held by police after he backed out on his side of the bargain, judiciary officials said on Sunday.
The couple, who were not named, had been married for just two days when, "due to their guilty consciences for having illicit sexual relations, they decided to kill each other at the same time," the official said.
The man helped to hang his wife but then changed his mind about killing himself and handed himself in to police in the northeastern Khorasan province, the official told the ISNA student news agency.
Pre-marital sex is taboo in the Islamic state where some girls have to go through a virginity test before tying knot.
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=oddlyEnoughNews&storyID=5644161
BOREALIS
Hamilton, Burr kin re-enact famous, fatal duel
Hamilton was mortally wounded on July 11, 1804
Douglas Hamilton, right, a fifth-great-grandson of Alexander Hamilton, passes Antonio Burr, a descendent of Aaron Burr’s cousin, while they assume position for the 200th anniversary historic reenactment of the Hamilton-Burr duel in Weehawken, N.J.
The Associated Press
Updated: 2:11 p.m. ET July 11, 2004WEEHAWKEN, N.J. - The bitter grudge between their ancestors has long faded, but on Sunday descendants of Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr marked their paces with pistols in hand.
Antonio Burr, a descendant of Burr’s cousin, arrived by rowboat in period costume and fired a replica of the .54-caliber pistol that mortally wounded Hamilton 200 years ago in the July 11, 1804 duel.
Douglas Hamilton, a fifth-great-grandson of Hamilton, feigned the historic hip wound, dropping to one knee and then falling to the ground in a sitting position.
The event was the families’ first meeting in two centuries.
“It wasn’t something on my top 100 list, but it was nice to meet Antonio Burr,” Douglas Hamilton said afterward. “He seems to be a very nice man, though I’m not sure I’m going to be on his Christmas card list.”
Still, Douglas Hamilton noted his famous ancestor had forgiven Aaron Burr on his deathbed and so could he.
“Just being shot 31 hours earlier, if he could forgive Burr, far be it for me not to honor that,” said Hamilton, an IBM salesman from suburban Columbus, Ohio.
More than 1,000 people attended the re-enactment near the Hudson River. The original duel’s exact site is unknown because the waterfront area is so dramatically different than it was 200 years ago, historians said Sunday.
An estimated 60 descendants of Hamilton attended the event, as did 40 members of the Aaron Burr Association.
A bitter feud
Hamilton, a signer of the Constitution and the nation’s first treasury secretary, had a simmering feud with his longtime rival Burr, the vice president under Thomas Jefferson.
Even today, some relatives question how the feud between the two began.
“There was an animosity on the part of Alexander Hamilton toward Aaron Burr for which there was nothing in Aaron Burr’s record that could be justified,” Antonio Burr, a psychologist from New York, said Sunday.
When Burr ran for governor of New York in early 1804, Hamilton denounced him as untrustworthy. Burr lost. Burr later complained about a newspaper article that reported Hamilton had expressed a “despicable opinion” of him.
Dissatisfied with Hamilton’s explanation, Burr, then the sitting vice president, challenged him to the duel.
Shot by Burr, Hamilton returned to New York, where he died the next day. Burr was indicted on murder charges in New York and New Jersey but was never tried, and finished his term as vice president in 1805.
After Sunday’s highly orchestrated event, Douglas Hamilton and Antonio Burr and their families headed to Hamilton Park where two new plaques honoring Burr and Hamilton were to be dedicated
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5416375/
BOREALIS
Woman charged in antifreeze poisoning
Brother-in-law died after drinking tainted juice
The Associated Press
Updated: 8:37 p.m. ET July 11, 2004
SHAMONG TOWNSHIP, N.J. - A woman was charged with killing her brother-in-law by poisoning his fruit drink with antifreeze, police said Sunday.
Maryann Neabor, 53, turned herself in early Sunday at a diner parking lot, accompanied by her lawyer. She was charged with murder and jailed in lieu of $500,000 bail.
Police accused Neabor of poisoning her brother-in-law with a drink she concocted that included pineapple juice, maraschino cherries and antifreeze.
The victim, Jonathan Neabor, had been visiting his brother and sister-in-law at their home last week. Police said he spent the night there after drinking the tainted beverage, becoming nauseated and dizzy. He was taken to a hospital and died Friday, police said.
Maryann Neabor, an emergency medical technician, was at hospital while her brother-in-law was being treated.
Tests revealed that Jonathan Neabor had ingested ethylene glycol, the sweet, odorless chemical used as antifreeze.
State police said the “financial resources” of Jonathan Neabor, a retired postal worker, were a potential motive for the crime. They did not release the name of her attorney.
Jonathan Neabor’s brother, Michael Neabor, 54, was not charged. He did not return a message left Sunday by The Associated Press.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5417426/
BOREALIS
THIS WEEK IN NANOTECH
Nanocience and NanoBusiness News from NanoApex
Dear Subscribers,
This Week in Nanotech covers research and commercialization of MEMS and nanotech from around the world, the emerging marketplace, and it's many players. This Week in Nanotech is your complete weekly update on everything going on in the world of tiny tech. Get your business information from NanoInvestorNews, hosting the largest nanocompany database in existence with over 800 entries.
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CAREER CENTER
Electronic Maintenance Engineer
http://nanoapex.tinytechjobs.com/cgi-bin/details?job_id=312
Business Development Manager for commercial application of Micro Optic and MEMS technologies
http://nanoapex.tinytechjobs.com/cgi-bin/details?job_id=310
test CAN job
http://nanoapex.tinytechjobs.com/cgi-bin/details?job_id=303
Electrochemical Engineer
http://nanoapex.tinytechjobs.com/cgi-bin/details?job_id=298
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NANOSCIENCE NEWS
NSF grant funds molecular photosensor
MELBOURNE, FLA.--Florida Tech [profile] researchers have earned a $100,000 National Science Foundation grant for a nanotechnology project, to develop a molecular photosensor. The photosensor will be based on compounds, such as Vitamin A, found in mammalian retinae. Dr. Joel Olson and Dr. Nasri Nesnas, assistant professors of chemistry, earned the grant to develop the technology, which can be useful in the fabrication of miniscule cameras--the size of a grain of sand--requiring very little power.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4722
The Methuselah Report
Living things are composed of molecular machines, and the tools for diagnosis are huge and imprecise. Nanobiotics would eliminate that disparity of scale, allowing the creation of biological robots that not only permit observation of the human body at the most refined level possible, but that can serve as sentinels to identify and prevent disease before symptoms even appear.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4721
Possible Quantum Stumbling Block Found For Nanotechnologies
The rage to exploit all things quantum may have hit a snag. Quantum nanorods, atomic structures that have been heralded as the key to everything from super-efficient solar cells to an elusive white laser, appear to have an inherent surface charge that may tarnish their gleaming image, according to a report by University of Rochester [profile] scientists in a recent issue of Physical Review Letters.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4720
HRH the Prince of Wales: Small is hazardous
I am well aware that promoting public debate about nanotechnology is an uncertain business. So, for the record, I do not believe that self-replicating robots, smaller than viruses, will one day multiply uncontrollably and devour our planet. The important thing is to get on with the sensible debate that should accompany the introduction of such technologies which work at the level of the basic building blocks of life itself.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4719
Tiny data storage crystals net award for NUS duo
AFTER three years, two researchers here have come up with a data storage device consisting of germanium crystals that are 100,000 times smaller than the diameter of a human hair. Using these tiny crystals, or nanocrystals, as storage elements in a computer's memory allows for better performance and reliability.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4718
Nanotech: Unpredictable And Un-Regulated
The ETC Group releases a new Communiqué today that provides an update on policy discussions related to nanotech health and safety issues and the glaring lack of regulatory oversight. According to the ETC Group, governments on both sides of the Atlantic are reluctantly and belatedly conceding that current safety and health regulations may not be adequate to address the special exigencies of nano-scale materials.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4717
A NICKEL INVESTMENT FOR FUTURE'S GRID WILL PAY OFF
By the middle of this century we should assume that we will need to double world energy production from its current level, with most of this coming from clean, sustainable, carbon dioxide-free sources. For worldwide peace and prosperity, it must be cheap. The system most likely to meet that goal is an electrical-based grid that draws from numerous sources - solar, wind, nuclear, geothermal, biomass and fossil fuels - for reliable energy.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4716
Scientists reveal the inner nanowire
Researchers at Lund University [profile] in Sweden have imaged the inside of a freestanding nanowire with atomic resolution for the first time. The process revealed defects inside a gallium arsenide (GaAs) nanowire such as planar twin segments and single-atom impurities.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4715
University Develops 12Tbyte Nano Memory
A memory technology that could squeeze almost 12Tbyte onto a CD-sized surface is under development in West London. Brunel University spinout company Diameter is looking for funds to develop a nano-scale memory based on shape-memory metal.
Read Article (Source: Electronic News)
Light on a chip' potential seen by scientists spoofing natural phenomenon
An ultrafine nanometre 'drill' could be used to make some of the tiniest lenses imaginable and may also allow scientists to harness light for use in optical computers of the future, thanks to research published today. Scientists from the UK and Spain describe in this week's Science Express (8 July) how artificial materials with tiny grooves and holes drilled into their surfaces could channel and focus light beams on a chip.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4713
Singapore sets aside more than $3m in scholarships for nanotechnology
SINGAPORE: Singapore [profile] has set aside more than S$3m worth of scholarships to develop nanotechnology, the study of structures many thousand times smaller than a strand of hair. At the launch of NUS Nanoscience and Nanotechnology Initiative, Acting Education Minister, Tharman Shanmugaratnam, said Singapore has filed six patents under the NUS Nano programme.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4712
Building your next car, one atom at a time
Researchers are finding ways to make vehicles safer, lighter, more powerful and ultimately less expensive by building materials one atom at a time. Factories will run more efficiently with the help of microscopic assembly machines. Injuries caused by accidents will be reduced. And eventually the price of your dream car might finally be a little closer to your budget.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4711
Nano-team spins tomorrow's yarn
A method to continuously spin carbon nanotubes has been developed by Cambridge-MIT Institute [profile] scientists. The Cambridge way brings the industrial production of a myriad of materials made of carbon nanotubes a step closer. The technique has been developed in the last six months by a UK team led by Professor Alan Windle at the Cambridge-MIT Institute (CMI).
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4710
Turning Science Fiction Into Fact
In the future, our computers no longer crash as we try and download pictures that are too heavy in memory, our cars no longer pollute the atmosphere and cancer could be dealt with by a visit to the GP. Thanks to cutting edge research happening now at the University of Leicester Department of Physics and Astronomy. Chris Binns, Professor of Nanoscience at the University, explained some of the projects he and his research team are working on.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4709
Tuning the Nanoworld
Scientists at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory [profile] have found new ways of combining quantum dots and segmented nanorods into multiply branching forms and have applied new ways to calculate the electronic properties of these nanostructures, whose dimensions are measured in billionths of a meter.
Read Article (Source: Berkeley Lab)
Comments From Robert Bradbury To Interview With Robert A. Freitas Jr.
I would like to offer some comments on the recent interview with Robert Freitas. The interview is at Nanonewsnet. Robert Bradbury is the president of Aeiveos Sciences Group.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4707
Solar cells for the masses
Breakthroughs in nanotech are making it possible to churn out cheap, flexible solar cells by the meter. Soon your cell phone may be powered by the sun. The company Konarka Technologies [profile] is currently testing a newly developed type of solar cell that is unlike those you commonly see used in calculators and on the sides of houses. These new cells come in flexible strips of around 5 cm wide and 10 cm long, looking very similar to photographic film.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4706
Diatomic power
Churning and drifting through the world's oceans ? indeed in any place where there is water ? are diatoms: single-celled, planktonic algae. For centuries, diatomists focused their microscopes primarily upon the task of finding and describing these variegated species. Others are taking note of diatoms: engineers, chemists and materials scientists who admire them not only for their biological beauty, but also for the potential of their microscopic architecture. http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4705
Optical litho: there are no fundamental limits
Illuminating silicon wafers with a pattern of light has long been the process of choice for making microelectronics, but there are fears that it will not be able to meet future demands. Steven Brueck, a supporter of the technology, argues why it is here to stay.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4704
Professor achieves nanotech advances
Size does matter, or at least distance does, according to University chemistry professor Jim Hutchison's research. Last month, Hutchison and his team at the Oregon Nanoscience and Microtechnologies Institute [profile] made a scientific breakthrough when they discovered a method to control the spacing between nanoparticles.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4703
Nanoparticles stiff from constant strain, UC Berkeley and LBNL scientists report
Berkeley - Take something no wider than a human hair and shrink it a thousand fold to a few nanometers across, and its electronic and other properties change radically. But whether the crystal structure of these nanoparticles remains basically the same is a matter scientists continue to debate. Now, a new report by scientists at the University of California, Berkeley, and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory [profile] (LBNL) shows that's far from the case.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4702
Free Nanotechnology Course Material
This material was produced as part of a ten hour course designed to introduce the scope of nanotechnology. Use is hereby granted for educational purposes only.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4701
Berkeley Lab Wins ''R&D 100'' Awards for Unique Electrochromic Windows and Synthetic Nanomotor
BERKELEY, CA - A unique new type of energy-saving electrochromic window and the smallest synthetic motor ever reported, both of which were developed by scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory [profile] (Berkeley Lab), have been recognized with 2004 R&D 100 Awards.
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4700
______________________________________
NANOBUSINESS NEWS
AMR announces update regarding new nanotechnology application
TORONTO, July 9 /CNW/ - On February 9, 2004 AMR [profile] announced that it had "developed a novel form of nanosized Cerium oxide material which could have significant implications for a global consumer product". Due to certain confidentiality agreements which are in place between AMR and its customer, AMR was unable, at that time, to provide details with respect to either its customer or the product.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3054
Tegal Corporation Announces the Addition of Two Senior Executives for Asia-Pacific and Europe
PETALUMA, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 8, 2004--Tegal Corporation [profile], a leading designer and manufacturer of plasma etch and deposition systems used in the production of integrated circuits and nanotechnology devices, today announced the addition of Mr. Edward Chan to the position of President, Tegal Asia-Pacific, and Mr. Birger Gneuss to the position of Vice President & General Manager, Tegal Europe.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3053
SUSS MicroTec Introduces Production Spray Coating Cluster at Semicon West
MUNICH, Germany--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 9, 2004--SUSS MicroTec AG [profile] Processes for fabrication of microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) and advanced packaging processes are exerting substantial influence across the semiconductor industry. As a consequence, applications for fabricating 3D microstructures and processing of thick photoresists are gaining momentum.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3052
iCurie Retains SunTrust Robinson Humphrey as Investment Banker
LONDON, July 9 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- iCurie Lab Holdings, Ltd. [profile] announced today that it has engaged SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, a leading Atlanta-based investment banking firm, for the purpose of assisting iCurie in its consideration of various strategic alternatives, including a private placement of equity securities. iCurie's Chief Executive, Dr. Jeong Hyun Lee, Ph.D., former NASA and Samsung Engineer said, "We are delighted that an investment banking firm of the high caliber of SunTrust Robinson Humphrey has come on board.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3051
Ener1's Vapor Deposition Nanotechnology Featured in Japan's Nikkei Electronics Magazine as Breakthrough for Energy Storage Devices
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla., July 8 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Ener1, Inc. [profile], (OTC Bulletin Board: ENEI), an emerging leader in the development of advanced lithium batteries, fuel cells and nanotechnology, announced today that the results of an independent test of its nanostructured, lithium-ion electrodes have been published in the June 21, 2004 issue of Nikkei Electronics, a leading trade publication in Japan.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3050
Evident Technologies in Commercial Production Of Proprietary Biotin Activated Quantum Dots
TROY, N.Y., July 8 /PRNewswire/ -- Evident Technologies, Inc. [profile] announced today that it has begun commercial production of its first biotinylated quantum dot fluorophores. The Biotin EviFluor(R) is available in wavelengths from blue to near infrared. The unique quantum dot EviFluor(R) offers significant advantages over traditional fluorophores, and can enable next generation applications in cell biology, drug discovery, cancer research and many other fields.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3049
From Flameout to Bargain Stock
The stock of biopharmaceutical and Merrill Lynch (NYSE: MER) Nanotech Index (AMEX: NNZ) member Flamel Technologies [profile] (Nasdaq: FLML) has declined more than 50% since hitting a $43.60 all-time high in September. The stock, down 11% today on no discernible news, is not matching the 20% increase, since May, of its index peer
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3048
3i backs nanotechnology start-up in catalytic converter market
British venture capital fund 3i has helped San Francisco-based start-up company Nanostellar [profile] secure $3 million in funding to enable the 15-person company to hire another three to 10 employees and reach the next stage of developing a platinum nano-composite to catalytic converter manufacturers.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3047
Altair Nanotechnologies Announces New Board Member Appointment
RENO, NV -- (MARKET WIRE) -- 07/09/2004 -- Altair Nanotechnologies, Inc. [profile] (NASDAQ: ALTI), a company engaged in developing performance materials and life science products using its metal oxide pigment and nanomaterials technology platforms, today announced the appointment of Dr. Michel Bazinet to its board of directors.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3046
DS Ingegneria Selects MEMSIC's Thermal Accelerometer For Use In Their OEM Vehicle Anti-Theft Systems
MEMSIC [profile], the leading provider of CMOS-based MEMS accelerometers/sensors, announced that it has been selected to supply its thermal accelerometers product to DS Ingegneria for use in an OEM vehicle anti-theft system for Mercedes Benz. The accelerometer will be used to detect tilt and motion on a number of Mercedes Benz models. When unwarranted motion is detected, the anti-theft system will transmit a notice to the owner via a cellular GSM link and the vehicle will be tracked via GPS.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3045
Biophan Technologies Continues Rapid Expansion of Patent Portfolio
Rochester, N.Y. July 7, 2004 -- Biophan Technologies, Inc. [profile] an innovator, developer, and marketer of MRI-related and other advanced biomedical technology, announced today that five new patents have issued and five patents have been allowed by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. Additional patents have been filed and are pending. This substantial increase in its proprietary technology base brings Biophans total U.S. portfolio, owned, as well as exclusively licensed, to 14 issued and 6 allowed patents, in addition to 54 applications in process, for a total of 74. Foreign patents are also pending.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3044
EV Group unveils NanoAlign Technology, new mask aligner at SEMICON West
SCHÄRDING, Austria - July 8, 2004 - EV Group [profile], a leading supplier of wafer-bonding and lithography equipment, today announced that it has developed an advanced aligner technology that improves competitiveness of full-field lithography by providing the industry's highest alignment accuracy and resolution at lowest cost of ownership. The new NanoAlign Technology features active run-out control and sub-100nm dynamic alignment resolution, complemented by UV-Nanoimprint (UV-NIL) capability.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3043
Micro Nano Breakthrough Conference planned for Portland
PORTLAND, Ore. A diverse group of people interested in the evolving growth of nanoscience and microtechnology will participate in the Micro Nano Breakthrough Conference 2004 scheduled for July 28-29 at the Sheraton Portland Airport.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3042
NanoMEMS Research, LLC Offers Hands-on RF MEMS Design
Irvine, CA, July 8, 2004- We are pleased to announce that NanoMEMS Research, LLC has expanded its RF MEMS short course offerings by including comprehensive hands-on instruction in the areas of RF MEMS Electromagnetic Design and RF MEMS Mechanical Design.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3041
Accelrys Announces Date of First Quarter Fiscal 2005 Financial Results and Conference Call
SAN DIEGO, July 7 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Accelrys, Inc. (Nasdaq: ACCL) today announced that it plans to release its financial results for the quarter ended June 30, 2004 after the NASDAQ Market closes on Thursday July 29, 2004. The company will conduct a conference call and an audio webcast at 5:00 p.m. EDT on the same day. Mark Emkjer, President, and CEO will host the call.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3040
FEI EXPANDS ITS EUROPEAN PRESENCE
July 8, 2004 - With European sales growing, FEI Company [profile], based in Hillsboro, Ore., has expanded its Eindhoven campus in the Netherlands and opened a new research center. At the new center, called NanoPort, scientists and FEI developers will work on joint research and development projects.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3039
Tegal Corporation to participate in SEMICON conference.
PETALUMA, Calif. --(Business Wire)-- July 7, 2004 -- Tegal Corporation [profile] (Nasdaq:TGAL), a leading designer and manufacturer of plasma etch and deposition systems used in the production of integrated circuits and nanotechnology devices, today announced that Company senior executives will participate in the SEMICON(R) West Conference at the Moscone Convention Center in San Francisco, CA, from July 12 through July 14, 2004.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3038
Q Chip wins technology investment
A NANOTECHNOLOGY company has raised almost £500,000 with help from big-namebackers to bring cutting edge technology developed in Wales to the marketplace.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3037
Taiwan establishes nano-industry association
TAIWAN [profile] HAS TODAY established a nano-industry association, featuring members from Taiwan's manufacturers, its academic circle and government organisations. The plan is set to increase the output value of the industry to around NT$300 billion in 2008.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3036
European Investors Back Konarka
LOWELL, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 7, 2004--Konarka Technologies, Inc. [profile], an innovator in developing and manufacturing breakthrough products that convert light to energy, announced today a significant investment from the European venture capital community as part of its recent $18 million Series C round of financing.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3035
Zyvex Hires North American Sales Manager
RICHARDSON, Texas, July 7 /PRNewswire/ -- Zyvex Corporation [profile], the first molecular nanotechnology company, today announced the addition of Lance Criscuolo to its Worldwide Sales team. Criscuolo will lead the North American sales development strategy, leveraging Zyvex's strong technical position and customer-driven focus.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3034
Harris & Harris Group Announces Closing of Follow-on Offering and Full Exercise of Overallotment Option
NEW YORK --(Business Wire)-- July 7, 2004 -- Harris & Harris Group, Inc. (Nasdaq: TINY), today announced the closing of its follow-on offering. The Company also announced that the underwriters exercised their over-allotment option in full and will purchase an additional 450,000 shares of common stock at $11.25 per share.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3033
Investment and Commercialization the Focus of Upcoming nanoSIG Forum
MENLO PARK, Calif. --(Business Wire)-- July 7, 2004 -- Nanotechnology investment and commercialization will be the topic of the July 14 event sponsored by nanoSIG, an international nonprofit industry organization enabling the commercialization of nanotechnology.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3032
BudgetSensors introduces conductive AFM probes
July 6th, 2004: BudgetSensors introduces high quality conductive AFM probes, covered with a 30nm Chromium/Platinum coating on both sides of the cantilever. Due to its advanced manufacturing technology, the tips radius of the conductive AFM probes is smaller than 25nm. For detailed information, visit www.budgetsensors.com .
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3031
Cypress Cuts R&D Costs with Open-Door Technology Center
Cypress Semiconductor Corp. today announced the formal opening of its Silicon Valley Technology Center (SVTC), a facility that aims to go from "lab-to-fab" by allowing customers to develop and characterize silicon-based technologies.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3030
SEMATECH Launches Immersion Technology Center to Help Prepare 193 nm Immersion Lithography for Manufacturing Introduction
AUSTIN, TX -- (MARKET WIRE) -- 07/06/2004 -- International SEMATECH today announced the formation of the193 nm immersion Technology Center (iTC), which will be one of the first major programs of the newly established Advanced Materials Research Center (AMRC). The iTC will bring together scientists and researchers to support the development of 193 nm immersion lithography, an emerging technology that uses the refractive properties of fluids to extend optical imaging in semiconductor manufacturing.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3029
CNI and Kostat to Develop Next Generation Electronics Packaging Materials
HOUSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 7, 2004--Carbon Nanotechnologies, Inc (CNI) [profile] and Kostat, Inc. today announced a joint development agreement to develop and commercialize conductive polymers for electronics module trays, carrier tapes and other electronics related applications. Products developed as a result of this collaboration will leverage the breakthrough properties of single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWNTs), CNI's expertise in applying SWNTs, and Kostat's expertise in polymer processing.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3028
GE Unveils Nanotech Device, May Shrink Future Chips
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Scientists at General Electric Co. [profile] unveiled one of the smallest functioning devices ever made on Wednesday, a carbon tube about 10 atoms wide that could one day shrink computer chip technology. Researchers at GE's central lab in Niskayuna, New York, hope that their new device, which is a rolled-up sheet of carbon atoms resembling chicken wire, will someday operate as the standard semiconductor in computers and other electronics.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3027
Nanosight Nanoparticle Detection System Launched
LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 6, 2004--NanoSight Ltd [profile], a UK based developer of nanometre scale imaging technologies, today announced that it is launching the innovative Halo(TM) LM10 nanoparticle detection instrument at the Microscience 2004 exhibition and conference at ExCel, London.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3026
Kopin Corporation Schedules Second-Quarter Conference Call
TAUNTON, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 6, 2004--Kopin Corporation [profile] plans to broadcast its second-quarter 2004 financial results conference call over the Internet at 5:00 p.m. ET, Thursday, July 22, 2004. Real time and archived versions of the call will be available on Kopin's website, www.kopin.com.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3025
Nano-Proprietary Signs Development, Purchase and License Agreement for Hydrogen Sensor Products
AUSTIN, Texas, July 6, 2004 (PRIMEZONE) -- Austin, Texas-based Nano-Proprietary [profile], through its subsidiary, Applied Nanotech, Inc. (ANI), today announced that it has entered into an exclusive development, purchase, and license agreement related to its hydrogen sensor products with an international company that specializes in the design, measurement, analysis, and development of electrical measuring equipment. The agreement is exclusive for the measurement of hydrogen in power transformers, tap changers, and breakers.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3024
EUROPEAN UNION EARMARKS BILLIONS TO PREPARE FOR A NANO FUTURE
July 6, 2004 - Nokia Corp. and STMicroelectronics [profile] have signed a joint declaration with the European Commission calling for $7.32 billion a year to be pumped into the development of nanotechnology, the science of molecular engineering, to prevent Europe falling behind the United States and Asia.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3022
Crystalplex to Become First 'Alumnus' of PLSG Incubator
PITTSBURGH, July 6 /PRNewswire/ -- The Pittsburgh Life Sciences Greenhouse (PLSG), a partnership to put the region's life sciences industry on a fast track for growth, today announced that Crystalplex Corporation [profile] has expanded and will move to larger facilities, serving as the first "alumnus" of the PLSG Incubator. Crystalplex is a leader in the commercialization of bead based nanosensors for use in drug discovery and medical diagnostics.
http://www.nanoinvestornews.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3021
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EVENTS
July 12, 2004 - July 14, 2004
SEMICON West 2004
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July 13, 2004 - July 17, 2004
Thinfilms 2004 and Nanotech 2004
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July 28, 2004 - July 29, 2004
Micro Nano Breakthrough Conference 2004
http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=My_Calendar&file=index&type=view&am...
July 29, 2004
2004 NanoSummit Research Conference
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August 21, 2004 - August 25, 2004
ICMENS
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BOREALIS
BUSH: question me and....
BOREALIS
Don't you just get the feeling that FOX is starting to sweat??
BOREALIS
The Most Biased Name in News
Fox News Channel's extraordinary right-wing tilt
August 2001
By Seth Ackerman
"I challenge anybody to show me an example of bias in Fox News Channel."
--Rupert Murdoch (Salon, 3/1/01)
Years ago, Republican party chair Rich Bond explained that conservatives' frequent denunciations of "liberal bias" in the media were part of "a strategy" (Washington Post, 8/20/92). Comparing journalists to referees in a sports match, Bond explained: "If you watch any great coach, what they try to do is 'work the refs.' Maybe the ref will cut you a little slack next time."
But when Fox News Channel, Rupert Murdoch's 24-hour cable network, debuted in 1996, a curious thing happened: Instead of denouncing it, conservative politicians and activists lavished praise on the network. "If it hadn't been for Fox, I don't know what I'd have done for the news," Trent Lott gushed after the Florida election recount (Washington Post, 2/5/01). George W. Bush extolled Fox News Channel anchor Tony Snow--a former speechwriter for Bush's father--and his "impressive transition to journalism" in a specially taped April 2001 tribute to Snow's Sunday-morning show on its five-year anniversary (Washington Post, 5/7/01). The right-wing Heritage Foundation had to warn its staffers not to watch so much Fox News on their computers, because it was causing the think tank's system to crash.
When it comes to Fox News Channel, conservatives don't feel the need to "work the ref." The ref is already on their side. Since its 1996 launch, Fox has become a central hub of the conservative movement's well-oiled media machine. Together with the GOP organization and its satellite think tanks and advocacy groups, this network of fiercely partisan outlets--such as the Washington Times, the Wall Street Journal editorial page and conservative talk-radio shows like Rush Limbaugh's--forms a highly effective right-wing echo chamber where GOP-friendly news stories can be promoted, repeated and amplified. Fox knows how to play this game better than anyone.
Yet, at the same time, the network bristles at the slightest suggestion of a conservative tilt. In fact, wrapping itself in slogans like "Fair and balanced" and "We report, you decide," Fox argues precisely the opposite: Far from being a biased network, Fox argues, it is the only unbiased network. So far, Fox's strategy of aggressive denial has worked surprisingly well; faced with its unblinking refusal to admit any conservative tilt at all, some commentators have simply acquiesced to the network's own self-assessment. FAIR has decided to take a closer look.
"Coming next, drug addicted pregnant women no longer have anything to fear from the authorities thanks to the Supreme Court. Both sides on this in a moment."
--Bill O'Reilly (O'Reilly Factor, 3/23/01)
Fox's founder and president, Roger Ailes, was for decades one of the savviest and most pugnacious Republican political operatives in Washington, a veteran of the Nixon and Reagan campaigns. Ailes is most famous for his role in crafting the elder Bush's media strategy in the bruising 1988 presidential race. With Ailes' help, Bush turned a double-digit deficit in the polls into a resounding win by targeting the GOP's base of white male voters in the South and West, using red-meat themes like Michael Dukakis' "card-carrying" membership in the ACLU, his laissez-faire attitude toward flag-burning, his alleged indifference to the pledge of allegiance--and, of course, paroled felon Willie Horton.
Described by fellow Bush aide Lee Atwater as having "two speeds--attack and destroy," Ailes once jocularly told a Time reporter (8/22/88): "The only question is whether we depict Willie Horton with a knife in his hand or without it." Later, as a producer for Rush Limbaugh's short-lived TV show, he was fond of calling Bill Clinton the "hippie president" and lashing out at "liberal bigots" (Washington Times, 5/11/93). It is these two sensibilities above all--right-wing talk radio and below-the-belt political campaigning--that Ailes brought with him to Fox, and his stamp is evident in all aspects of the network's programming.
Fox daytime anchor David Asman is formerly of the right-wing Wall Street Journal editorial page and the conservative Manhattan Institute. The host of Fox News Sunday is Tony Snow, a conservative columnist and former chief speechwriter for the first Bush administration. Eric Breindel, previously the editorial-page editor of the right-wing New York Post, was senior vice president of Fox's parent company, News Corporation, until his death in 1998; Fox News Channel's senior vice president is John Moody, a long-time journalist known for his staunch conservative views.
Fox's managing editor is Brit Hume, a veteran TV journalist and contributor to the conservative American Spectator and Weekly Standard magazines. Its top-rated talkshow is hosted by Bill O'Reilly, a columnist for the conservative WorldNetDaily.com and a registered Republican (that is, until a week before the Washington Post published an article revealing his party registration--12/13/00).
The abundance of conservatives and Republicans at Fox News Channel does not seem to be a coincidence. In 1996, Andrew Kirtzman, a respected New York City cable news reporter, was interviewed for a job with Fox and says that management wanted to know what his political affiliation was. "They were afraid I was a Democrat," he told the Village Voice (10/15/96). When Kirtzman refused to tell Fox his party ID, "all employment discussion ended," according to the Voice.
Catherine Crier, who was perceived as one of Fox's most prestigious and credible early hires, was an elected Republican judge before starting a career in journalism. (Crier has since moved on to Court TV.) Pundit Mara Liasson--who is touted as an on-air "liberal" by Fox executives--sits on the board of the conservative human-rights group Freedom House; New York magazine (11/17/97) cited a Fox insider as saying that Liasson assured president Roger Ailes before being hired that she was a Republican.
"Who would be the most likely to cheat at cards-- Bill Clinton or Al Gore?"
--Fox News Channel/Opinion Dynamics poll (5/00)
The most obvious sign of Fox's slant is its heavily right-leaning punditry. Each episode of Special Report with Brit Hume, for example, features a three-person panel of pundits who chat about the day's political news at the end of the show. The most frequent panelist is Fred Barnes, the evangelical Christian supply-sider who edits the Murdoch-owned Weekly Standard. He sits proudly on the rightward flank of the Republican party (and often scolds it for slouching leftwards).
The next most frequent guest is Mort Kondrake, who sits in the middle of the panel. Politically, Kondrake falls at the very rightward edge of the Democratic party-- if not beyond it. As he famously explained in a 1988 New Republic essay (8/29/88), he is a Democrat who is "disgusted with the Democratic Party" and whose main reason for not defecting to the Republicans is that they "have failed to be true to themselves as conservatives." (He was referring to Reagan's deficit spending.)
Rounding out the panel is its third-most-frequent pundit, Mara Liasson, who sits on the opposite side of the table from the conservative Barnes, implicitly identifying her as a liberal. But her liberalism consists of little more than being a woman who works for National Public Radio; she has proposed that "one of the roots of the problem with education today is feminism" (Talk of the Nation, 5/3/01); she declares that "Jesse Jackson gets away with a lot of things that other people don't" (Special Report, 6/21/00); she calls George W. Bush's reversal on carbon dioxide emissions "a small thing" (3/14/01), campaign finance reform "an issue that . . . only 200 people in America care about" (3/19/01) and slavery reparations "pretty much of a non-issue" (3/19/01).
Less frequent Special Report panelists include conservative Washington Times reporter Bill Sammon, centrist Fortune writer Jeff Birnbaum and NPR host Juan Williams. Williams, the only guest who could plausibly claim to be a liberal, was so outraged over attacks on his friend Clarence Thomas that he declared that "liberals have become monsters" (Washington Post, 10/10/91), denouncing the "so-called champions of fairness: liberal politicians, unions, civil rights groups and women's organizations." Indeed, Fox's crew of "liberal" pundits seems almost calculated to be either ineffective left-of-center advocates or conciliatory moderates. Ironically, perhaps the only Fox commentator who consistently presents a strong progressive perspective--that is, critical of corporate power and militarism, and sympathetic to progressive social movements--is FAIR founder Jeff Cohen, a weekly panelist on the weekend media show Fox News Watch.
Meanwhile, Barnes and Kondracke --the conservative Republican and conservative Democrat--make up the entire political spectrum on Fox's weekend political show, The Beltway Boys, where they are generally in agreement as they discuss the week's news.
Even Fox's "left-right" debate show, Hannity & Colmes--whose Crossfire-style format virtually imposes numerical equality between conservatives and "liberals"--can't shake the impression of resembling a Harlem Globetrotters game in which everyone knows which side is supposed to win.
On the right, co-host Sean Hannity is an effective and telegenic ideologue, a protégé of Newt Gingrich and a rising star of conservative talk radio who is perhaps more plugged into the GOP leadership than any media figure besides Rush Limbaugh. (Hannity reportedly received "thunderous applause" when he spoke at a recent closed-door House Republican Conference meeting that is usually closed to the media--U.S. News & World Report, 5/7/01.)
On the left is Alan Colmes, a rather less telegenic former stand-up comic and radio host whose views are slightly left-of-center but who, as a personality, is completely off the radar screen of liberal politics. "I'm quite moderate," he told a reporter when asked to describe his politics (USA Today, 2/1/95). Hannity, a self-described "arch-conservative" (Electronic Media, 8/26/96), joined Fox when the network was started, and personally nominated Colmes to be his on-screen debating opponent (New York Times, 3/1/98). Before the selection was made, the show's working title was Hannity & Liberal to Be Determined--giving some idea of the relative weight each host carries, both on-screen and within the network. Fox sometimes sends a camera down to Hannity's radio studio during the network's daytime news programming, from which he holds forth on the news of the day. Needless to say, Colmes does not receive similar treatment.
"I think what's going on is the Democratic lawyers have flooded Florida. They are afraid of George W. Bush becoming president and instituting tort reform and their gravy train will be over. This is the trial association's full court press to make sure Bush does not win."
--Fox News Channel anchor John Gibson (12/9/00)
Fox has had trouble at times hiding the partisanship of its main news personalities. In 1996, while already a Fox anchor, Tony Snow endorsed Bob Dole for president in the Republican National Committee magazine Rising Tide (New York, 11/17/97). A former speech-writer for the elder Bush, Snow often guest-hosts the Rush Limbaugh show and wrote an unabashedly conservative weekly newspaper column until Fox management recently pressured him to drop it to avoid the appearance of bias (Washington Post, 5/29/01).
At the 2000 Republican convention in Philadelphia, Snow--ostensibly present as a journalist covering a news event--jumped onstage to give a speech to the Republican Youth Caucus after organizers asked him to fill in for a speaker who couldn't make it. (He was later reprimanded by his bosses.) Trent Lott, whose speech directly followed Snow's, began with a cheer of "How about Tony Snow in 2008?" (New York Daily News 8/2/00; Federal News Service, 8/1/00).
Just three days earlier, near the GOP convention, Bill O'Reilly gave the keynote speech at David Horowitz's conservative "Restoration Weekend" event, where he was introduced by Republican congressmember Jack Quinn. Fox's Sean Hannity also spoke at the gathering, described by the Washington Times (6/30/00) as the "premiere political event for conservative thinkers." O'Reilly has had Horowitz on his show six times--to talk about everything from National Public Radio's "left" bias (12/20/00) to Hillary Clinton's "sense of entitlement" (6/22/00) to Horowitz's book on race relations, Hating Whitey (10/4/99).
"There's a certain sameness to the news on the Big Three [networks] and CNN. . . . America is bad, corporations are bad, animal species should be protected, and every cop is a racist killer. That's where 'fair and balanced' [Fox's slogan] comes in. We don't think all corporations are bad, every forest should be saved, every government spending program is good. We're going to be more inquisitive."
--John Moody, Fox News Channel's senior vice-president for news and editorial (Brill's Content, 10/99)
Some mainstream journalists have suggested that Fox's "straight news" is more or less balanced, however slanted its commentary might be. "A close monitoring of the channel over several weeks indicates that the news segments tend to be straightforward, with little hint of political subtext except for stories the news editors feel the 'mainstream' press has either downplayed or ignored," wrote Columbia Journalism Review's Neil Hickey (3-4/98). The fact that Fox's "chat consistently tilts to the conservative side," wrote the Washington Post's Howard Kurtz (2/5/01), "may cast an unwarranted cloud on the news reporting, which tends to be straightforward."
When a New York Times profile of Fox News ran with a headline calling it a "conservative cable channel" (9/18/00), the paper quickly corrected their "error" the following day, explaining that in "attributing a general political viewpoint to the network, the headline exceeded the facts in the article."
Putting aside the question of what genuine "balance" means, there are undoubtedly a few reporters in Fox's Washington bureau--such as White House correspondent Jim Angle--whose stories are more or less indistinguishable from those of their counterparts at the mainstream networks.
But an attentive viewer will notice that there are entire blocks of the network's programming schedule that are set aside for conservative stories. Fox's website offers a regular feature on "political correctness" entitled "Tongue-Tied: A Report From the Front Lines of the Culture Wars," whose logo is a scowling "PC Patrol" officer peering testily through a magnifying glass. It invites readers to write in and "keep us up on examples of PC excess you come across."
Recently the network debuted a weekly half-hour series--Only on Fox--devoted explicitly to right-wing stories. The concept of the show was explained by host Trace Gallagher in the premier episode (5/26/01):
Five years ago, Fox News Channel was launched on the idea that something was wrong with news media--that somehow, somewhere bias found its way into reporting. . . . And it's not just the way you tell a story that can get in the way of the truth. It's the stories you choose to tell. . . . Fox News Channel is committed to being fair and balanced in the coverage of the stories everybody is reporting--and to reporting stories you won't hear anywhere else. Stories you will see only on Fox.
Gallagher then introduced a series of stories about one conservative cause after another: from white firefighters suing Boston's fire department for discrimination, to sawmill workers endangered by Clinton-Gore environmental regulations (without comment from a single supporter of the rules), to property owners who feel threatened by an environmental agreement "signed by President Clinton in 1992." (The agreement was actually signed by George Bush the elder, who was president in 1992--though that didn't stop Fox from using news footage of a smiling Bill Clinton proudly signing an official document that was supposed to be, but wasn't, the environmental pact in question.)
Fox's news specials are equally slanted: Dangerous Places (3/25/01), a special about foreign policy hosted by Newt Gingrich; Heroes, an irregular series hosted by former Republican congressmember John Kasich; and The Real Reagan (11/25/99), a panel discussion on Ronald Reagan, hosted by Tony Snow, in which all six guests were Reagan friends and political aides. Vanishing Freedoms 2: Who Owns America (5/19/01) wandered off into militia-style paranoia, suggesting that the U.N. was "taking over" private property.
There is a formula to Fox's news agenda. "A lot of the people we have hired," Fox executive John Moody explained (Inside Media, 12/11/96) when the network was launched, "have come without the preconceptions of must-do news. There are stories we will sometimes forego in order to do stories we think are more significant. The biggest strength that we have is that Roger Ailes has allowed me to do that; to forego stores that would be 'duty' stories in order to focus on other things."
These "other" stories that Moody has in mind are what make up much of Fox's programming: An embarrassing story about Jesse Jackson's sex life. The latest political-correctness outrage on campus. A one-day mini-scandal about a Democratic senator. Much like talk radio, Fox picks up these tidbits from right-wing outlets like the Washington Times or the Drudge Report and runs with them.
To see how the formula works, consider the recent saga of right-wing activist David Horowitz and his "censored" anti-slavery reparations ad. When some college newspapers refused to carry the ad, and some campuses saw protests against it, the case instantly became a cause celebre on the right. It was the perfect story for Fox: The liberal academic establishment trampling on the free speech of a conservative who merely asked that his views be heard. Within less than a month, Horowitz was on nearly every major Fox show to discuss the issue. (See sidebar.)
Former CBS producer Don Dahler resigned from Fox after executive John Moody ordered him to change a story to play down statistics showing a lack of social progress among blacks. (Moody says the change was journalistically justified--New York, 11/17/97.) According to the Columbia Journalism Review (3-4/98), "several" former Fox employees "complained of 'management sticking their fingers' in the writing and editing of stories to cook the facts to make a story more palatable to right-of-center tastes." Said one: "I've worked at a lot of news organizations and never found that kind of manipulation."
Jed Duvall, a former veteran ABC reporter who left Fox after a year, told New York (11/17/97): "I'll never forget the morning that one producer came up to me, and, rubbing her hands like Uriah Heep, said, 'Let's have something on Whitewater today.' That sort of thing doesn't happen at a professional news organization." Indeed, Fox's signature political news show, Special Report with Brit Hume, was originally created as a daily one-hour update devoted to the 1998 Clinton sex scandal.
"In the D.C. bureau [at ABC], we always had to worry what the lead story would be in the New York Times, and God forbid if we didn't have that story. Now we don't care if we have that story." Stories favored by the journalistic establishment, Kim Hume says, are "all mushy, like AIDS, or all silly, like Head Start. They want to give publicity to people they think are doing good."
--New York magazine(11/17/97) quoting Kim Hume, Fox News Channel Washington bureau chief
One of the most partisan features on Fox is a daily segment on Special Report called "The Political Grapevine." Billed as "the most scintillating two minutes in television," the Grapevine is a kind of right-wing hot-sheet. It features Brit Hume at the anchor's desk reading off a series of gossipy items culled from other, often right-wing, news outlets.
The key to the Grapevine is its story selection, and there is nothing subtle about it. Almost every item carries an unmistakable partisan message: Democrats, environmentalists and Hollywood liberals are the perennial villains (or the butts of the joke), while Republicans are shown either as targets of unfair attacks or heroes who can do no wrong. Political correctness run amok, the "liberal bias" of the mainstream media and the chicanery of civil rights groups all figure prominently.
When Rep. Patrick Kennedy tussled with airport security (3/21/01), Democrat Pete Stark used intemperate language (4/18/01) and California Gov. Gray Davis uttered a string of curse words (4/18/01), it made it onto the Grapevine. When the Sacramento Bee ran a series on the shortcomings of the big environmental groups, its findings earned a mention on the Grapevine (4/21/01). When it emerged that Al Gore booster Ben Affleck didn't bother to vote in last year's election, you heard about it on the Grapevine (4/25/01).
Republicans are treated differently. "Since [New York's] Rudolph Giuliani became the mayor," one item cheered (4/24/01), "the streets are cleaner and safer, and tourism reigns supreme in Times Square." When George W. Bush ordered men to wear a coat and tie to enter the Oval Office, Grapevine (5/14/01) noted that "his father had a similar reverence for the office," while "President Clinton used to come into the Oval Office in running shorts . . . and sometimes he did not remain fully clothed while he was there."
The success of the Grapevine has apparently inspired a spin-off on Fox's Sunday morning show. Fox News Sunday anchor Tony Snow recently inaugurated "Below the Fold," a weekly roundup of "unheralded political stories" that is basically identical to Grapevine, including the conservative spin. When one Below the Fold item (4/15/01) mentioned that Barbra Streisand was reportedly thinking of starting up "a cable TV network devoted exclusively to Democratic viewpoints," Snow couldn't resist adding that the singer came up with the idea "apparently believing such a thing doesn't exist already."
Fox News Channel is "not a conservative network!" roars Fox News Channel chairman Ailes. "I absolutely, totally deny it. . . . The fact is that Rupert [Murdoch] and I and, by the way, the vast majority of the American people, believe that most of the news tilts to the left," he says. Fox's mission is "to provide a little more balance to the news" and "to go cover some stories that the mainstream media won't cover."
--Brill's Content (10/99) quoting Roger Ailes
To hear the network's bigwigs tell it, it's not Fox that's being biased when it puts conservative fare on heavy rotation. It's the "liberal media" that are biased when they fail to do so. Fox's entire editorial philosophy revolves around the idea that the mainstream media have a liberal bias that Fox is obligated to rectify.
In interviews, Ailes and other Fox executives often expound this philosophy, sometimes with bizarre results. Ailes once told the New York Times (10/7/96) that he and Fox executive John Moody had both noticed a pattern in the weekly newsmagazines: They often cover religion, "but it's always a story that beats up on Jesus." "They call him a cult figure of his time, some kind of crazy fool," Ailes continued. "And it's as if they go out and try to find evidence to trash him." Moody added that two recent Time and Newsweek articles on Jesus "really bordered on the sacrilegious."
But the core of Fox's critique is the notion that the mainstream media just don't tell the conservative side of the story. This is the premise Fox executives start from when they defend their own network: If Fox appears conservative, they argue, it's only because the country has grown so accustomed to the left-leaning media that a truly balanced network seems to lean right. "The reason you may believe it tips to the right is you're stunned at seeing so many conservatives," Ailes once told a reporter (Washington Post, 2/5/01).
But Ailes and his colleagues have trouble backing up these claims with actual facts. He's fond of calling Bob Novak the only conservative on CNN--"that's the only guy they hired that was to the right!" (Charlie Rose, 5/22/01) --but he ignores Tucker Carlson, Kate O'Beirne and Mary Matalin (who recently left for the White House), not to mention past conservative stars such as Lynne Cheney, Mona Charen, John Sununu and, of course, Pat Buchanan, perhaps the most right-wing figure in national politics and an 18-year veteran of Crossfire (minus the occasional hiatus to run for president).
According to Bill O'Reilly, Fox "gives voice to people who can't get on other networks. When was the last time you saw pro-life people [on other networks] unless they shot somebody?" (Philadelphia Inquirer, 4/10/01). O'Reilly's question is easily answered; in the last three years, the National Right to Life Committee's spokespeople have appeared on CNN 21 times (compared with 16 appearances for their main counterpart, the National Abortion Rights Action League).
In a 1999 Washington Post profile (3/26/99), Ailes offered another example. He said he was particularly proud of a three-part series on education that Fox had recently aired, which reported that "many educators believe self-esteem teaching is harmful" to students. "The mainstream media will never cover that story," Ailes told the Post. "I've seen 10,000 stories on education and I've never seen one that didn't say the federal government needed to spend more money on education."
But just weeks prior to Ailes' interview, CNN's weekly Newsstand series (2/28/99) aired a glowing profile of an upstate New York business executive who had turned around a troubled inner-city elementary school "by bringing the lessons of the boardroom into the classroom." CNN's report came complete with soundbites from a conservative education advocate ("the unions are a major impediment to education reform") and lines from host Jeff Greenfield like, "Critics have said that for decades, the public education system has behaved like an entrenched monopoly with little or no incentive to improve its performance." The piece would have warmed the heart of any conservative education reformer.
The difference between the two networks is that while such conservative-friendly fare airs on CNN some of the time, Fox has oriented its whole network around it. Contrary to what Ailes and other right-wing media critics say, the agenda of CNN and its fellow mainstream outlets is not liberal or conservative, but staunchly centrist. The perspectives they value most are those of the bipartisan establishment middle, the same views that make up the mainstream corporate consensus that media publishers and executives are themselves a part of. It's politicians who stake out centrist, pro-business positions within their parties who win the adulation of the Washington press corps, like John McCain and Joe Lieberman during the 2000 campaign. Both parties are constantly urged by the media to "move to the center."
Defenders of Fox might argue that its brand of conservative-tilted programming fills a void, since it represents a form of ideologically hard-edged news seldom seen in the centrist media. But the same point could be made on the other side of the spectrum: Just as conservative stories don't always make it onto CNN, neither do stories that matter to the left. A left-wing version of Fox might run frequent updates on the Mumia Abu-Jamal case, the dangers of depleted uranium weapons or the benefits of single-payer health care. That would contrast sharply with CNN--but it wouldn't justify calling CNN "right-wing" or "conservative." Fox's "leftist" accusations are equally unfounded.
At about the same time that Fox was taking a deep interest in the David Horowitz ad controversy, the Boston Globe refused to run an ad criticizing the office supply company Staples for its use of non-recycled paper. Though the Globe is arguably a more important venue for debate than any number of college papers, the case was not reported by either Fox or CNN. Indeed, until a FAIR letter-writing campaign forced the Globe ombudsman to address the issue (6/11/01), only one publication in the Nexis news database reported it at all (Sacramento Bee, 4/12/01).
"The media are not disposed toward Republican presidents--any Republican president--and really never have been."
--Brit Hume, Fox News Channel managing editor (Washington Post, 9/25/00)
Fox is sometimes forced to juggle two identities--Republican and conservative--that are not always the same. A recent example was the standoff over the downed American spy plane in China. Following appearances on Special Report by conservatives William Kristol (4/9/01) and Fred Barnes (4/11/01), who were critical of Bush for his unexpectedly conciliatory handling of the crisis, Fox (4/13/01) was quick to run a slew of letters from outraged Republican viewers accusing the pundits of trying to "undermine a president of their own party." They "never cut him a bit of slack," one viewer wrote. "Who needs Dan Rather when you have Mr. Kristol to bring down our president?"
Fox's sensitivity to Republican complaints came into the open during the 2000 presidential campaign when Tony Snow was the target of a barrage of criticism from posters to the far-right website FreeRepublic.com, who accused him of being too negative about the Bush campaign in his columns and on Fox News Channel.
Snow responded to the Freepers, as the site's conservative contributors call themselves, with a long and detailed apologia, highlighting every pro-Bush aspect of his work in excruciating detail. Discussing his syndicated conservative column, he wrote:
I have found over the years that the best way to be friendly to any politician is to be honest. Having said that, I've hardly been hostile to Bush in recent columns. Yes, I have criticized him this year, but no serious reader could possibly believe Gore has gotten the best of the exchange.
Just check out the two most recent columns. A piece on "specifics" notes that Gore offers virtually no specifics to voters and the few he mentions are nuts. There's plenty of grist there for Bush fans and the Bush campaign. The most recent defends Bush in the Adam Clymer affair.
In response to a writer who was irate at a video clip showing a Bush gaffe, Snow replied: "Yes, we carried a Bush gaffe at the end. It was funny, not damaging to the candidate."
And perhaps most tellingly, he described the strategy he had recently used on Fox News Sunday (9/10/00) to interview a pair of guests about the presidential campaign-- the first an aide to Bill Clinton, the second the Republican governor of Pennsylvania:
1) We opened with a tough interview of John Podesta, taking Clinton to task for a series of things (including hate crimes legislation) and asking some tough questions about Gore's energy and health-care policies.
2) Tom Ridge came next. We tried to get him to fire away at Clinton/Gore corruption. He wouldn't do it. We tried to get him to urge a more openly conservative campaign by Bush. He wouldn't do it. If you have complaints about such matters, I suggest you write the Bush campaign, not Fox News Channel.
In other words, Snow admits he was trying to put the Democratic guest on the defensive about Clinton--while goading the Republican into playing offense against Clinton. (The episode is a perfect example of Fox's notion of balance: attacking Democrats and liberals on substance while challenging Repub-licans and conservatives only on tactics.) In closing the memo, Snow wrote, "Parting thoughts: I made fun of the United Nations." He concluded: "I have a hard time finding anything in that lineup that Freepers would consider treasonous."
"Fair and balanced, as always."
--Fox News slogan
Some have suggested that Fox's conservative point of view and its Republican leanings render the network inherently unworthy as a news outlet. FAIR believes that view is misguided. The United States is unusual, perhaps even unique, in having a journalistic culture so fiercely wedded to the elusive notion of "objective" news (an idea of relatively recent historical vintage even in the U.S.). In Great Britain, papers like the conservative Times of London and the left-leaning Guardian deliver consistently excellent coverage while making no secret of their respective points of view. There's nothing keeping American journalists from doing the same.
If anything, it is partly the disingenuous claim to objectivity that is corroding the integrity of the news business. American journalists claim to represent all political views with an open mind, yet in practice a narrow bipartisan centrism excludes dissenting points of view: No major newspaper editorial page opposed NAFTA; virtually all endorse U.S. airstrikes on Iraq; and single-payer health care proposals find almost no backers among them.
With the ascendance of Fox News Channel, we now have a national conservative TV network in addition to the established centrist outlets. But like the mainstream networks, Fox refuses to admit its political point of view. The result is a skewed center-to-right media spectrum made worse by the refusal to acknowledge any tilt at all.
Fox could potentially represent a valuable contribution to the journalistic mix if it admitted it had a conservative point of view, if it beefed up its hard news and investigative coverage (and cut back on the tabloid sensationalism), and if there were an openly left-leaning TV news channel capable of balancing both Fox's conservatism and CNN's centrism.
None of these three things appears likely to happen in the foreseeable future.
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SIDEBAR:
Toeing the Line on Special Report
For some, the free market is a religion. That seems true for Fox News reporter Brit Hume, who has made no secret of what he thinks about the idea of caps on wholesale electricity prices in California. Hume commented on Fox (5/29/01) that "no one with an economics degree that I know" would support price caps for California.
In fact, 10 prominent mainstream economists wrote a letter to George W. Bush endorsing the idea. "We are mindful of the potential dangers of applying a simple price cap," they wrote (New York Times, 5/30/01). "But California's electricity markets are not characterized by effective competition." The letter added that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's "failure to act now will have dire consequences for the state of California." Paul Krugman, one of the country's most prominent economists, had by that point written six columns in the New York Times calling for energy price caps.
But on Fox, laissez-faire orthodoxy was enforced. When Jeff Birnbaum, Washington bureau chief of Fortune magazine and a frequent guest on Special Report with Brit Hume, suggested (5/29/01) that price caps "might help the blackouts through this summer," this view was rejected by both of the other panelists, Morton Kondracke and Bill Kristol. Hume, acting as moderator, derided Birnbaum for his deviation: "Did you ever have any economics in college? . . . There are books . . . that could help you."
A day later (5/30/01), Birnbaum came on the show to deliver what can only be described as a recantation: "I consulted my Economics 101, and I made a mistake last night when I spoke," he said. "Price caps are definitely the wrong economic answer. It could lead to a spreading energy gap and problem beyond California's borders and a long-term energy problem that would clearly be a serious political and substantive problem for the Bush administration."
"No apology required," was Hume's response. But one got the definite impression that toeing the ideological line is required on Special Report.
--Peter Hart
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SIDEBAR:
An Obsession That Only Goes So Far
One of Fox News Channel's favorite recent stories involved a newspaper ad that claimed African-Americans benefited from slavery, and owed America for the favor. The ad's author, conservative activist David Horowitz, claimed to be a victim of censorship and "political correctness" because a number of college newspapers refused to publish his ad, which argued against the idea of slavery reparations. Fox saw this as a major issue: Horowitz and his ad were mentioned at least 21 times on the network between March 6 and April 3.
On Fox News Sunday (3/25/01), the network's Sunday-morning equivalent of Meet the Press, interviews with Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham and Sen. Joseph Lieberman were incongruously followed by a segment featuring a largely unknown reparations activist and David Horowitz, in a Crossfire-style debate about Horowitz's rejected ad.
On Special Report with Brit Hume, the Horowitz ad became the subject of at least nine "Grapevine" items in less than a month. The ad was also the subject of Hume's lead question to conservative columnist John Leo when he appeared for a one-on-one interview (3/23/01). Afterward, Hume put the Horowitz issue to the show's all-star panel of pundits; all three pundits agreed that campus liberals were squelching debate. Mara Liasson argued that reparations are "pretty much of a non-issue" and Horowitz's ad was not "nearly as bad as the kind of hate speech you hear about in other cases," while Mort Kondracke explained that "there's nothing racist in this."
On Hannity & Colmes (3/26/01), the issue was: "Has David Horowitz's freedom of speech become a victim of political correctness?" On The O'Reilly Factor (3/6/01), it was Horowitz and host Bill O'Reilly interrogating a reparations activist from Mobile, Alabama. ("That's my tax money!" O'Reilly exclaimed.) The Edge with Paula Zahn brought Horowitz on three times within a month to discuss the same subject.
But there was one twist to the Horowitz story that Fox couldn't be bothered to report. When Horowitz's ad was offered to the Daily Princetonian in April, the paper ran it--along with an editorial (4/4/01) describing its ideas as racist and promising to donate the ad's proceeds to the local chapter of the Urban League. Horowitz, the free-speech crusader, refused to pay his bill unless the paper's editors publicly apologized for their hurtful words: "Its slanders contribute to the atmosphere of intolerance and hate towards conservatives," a statement from his office read.
Suddenly Fox lost interest in the Horowitz case. After a month of running twice-weekly updates about college papers that were refusing the ad, Special Report with Brit Hume ignored the Princeton episode. None of the network's major shows transcribed in the Nexis database reported Horowitz's tiff with the paper. No editor from the Princetonian was invited on The O'Reilly Factor to debate whether or not Horowitz was being a hypocrite. When their favorite free-speech martyr suddenly looked like a censor, it was a story Fox just didn't want to pursue.
http://www.fair.org/extra/0108/fox-main.html
BOREALIS
The Most Biased Name in News
Fox News Channel's extraordinary right-wing tilt
August 2001
By Seth Ackerman
"I challenge anybody to show me an example of bias in Fox News Channel."
--Rupert Murdoch (Salon, 3/1/01)
Years ago, Republican party chair Rich Bond explained that conservatives' frequent denunciations of "liberal bias" in the media were part of "a strategy" (Washington Post, 8/20/92). Comparing journalists to referees in a sports match, Bond explained: "If you watch any great coach, what they try to do is 'work the refs.' Maybe the ref will cut you a little slack next time."
But when Fox News Channel, Rupert Murdoch's 24-hour cable network, debuted in 1996, a curious thing happened: Instead of denouncing it, conservative politicians and activists lavished praise on the network. "If it hadn't been for Fox, I don't know what I'd have done for the news," Trent Lott gushed after the Florida election recount (Washington Post, 2/5/01). George W. Bush extolled Fox News Channel anchor Tony Snow--a former speechwriter for Bush's father--and his "impressive transition to journalism" in a specially taped April 2001 tribute to Snow's Sunday-morning show on its five-year anniversary (Washington Post, 5/7/01). The right-wing Heritage Foundation had to warn its staffers not to watch so much Fox News on their computers, because it was causing the think tank's system to crash.
When it comes to Fox News Channel, conservatives don't feel the need to "work the ref." The ref is already on their side. Since its 1996 launch, Fox has become a central hub of the conservative movement's well-oiled media machine. Together with the GOP organization and its satellite think tanks and advocacy groups, this network of fiercely partisan outlets--such as the Washington Times, the Wall Street Journal editorial page and conservative talk-radio shows like Rush Limbaugh's--forms a highly effective right-wing echo chamber where GOP-friendly news stories can be promoted, repeated and amplified. Fox knows how to play this game better than anyone.
Yet, at the same time, the network bristles at the slightest suggestion of a conservative tilt. In fact, wrapping itself in slogans like "Fair and balanced" and "We report, you decide," Fox argues precisely the opposite: Far from being a biased network, Fox argues, it is the only unbiased network. So far, Fox's strategy of aggressive denial has worked surprisingly well; faced with its unblinking refusal to admit any conservative tilt at all, some commentators have simply acquiesced to the network's own self-assessment. FAIR has decided to take a closer look.
"Coming next, drug addicted pregnant women no longer have anything to fear from the authorities thanks to the Supreme Court. Both sides on this in a moment."
--Bill O'Reilly (O'Reilly Factor, 3/23/01)
Fox's founder and president, Roger Ailes, was for decades one of the savviest and most pugnacious Republican political operatives in Washington, a veteran of the Nixon and Reagan campaigns. Ailes is most famous for his role in crafting the elder Bush's media strategy in the bruising 1988 presidential race. With Ailes' help, Bush turned a double-digit deficit in the polls into a resounding win by targeting the GOP's base of white male voters in the South and West, using red-meat themes like Michael Dukakis' "card-carrying" membership in the ACLU, his laissez-faire attitude toward flag-burning, his alleged indifference to the pledge of allegiance--and, of course, paroled felon Willie Horton.
Described by fellow Bush aide Lee Atwater as having "two speeds--attack and destroy," Ailes once jocularly told a Time reporter (8/22/88): "The only question is whether we depict Willie Horton with a knife in his hand or without it." Later, as a producer for Rush Limbaugh's short-lived TV show, he was fond of calling Bill Clinton the "hippie president" and lashing out at "liberal bigots" (Washington Times, 5/11/93). It is these two sensibilities above all--right-wing talk radio and below-the-belt political campaigning--that Ailes brought with him to Fox, and his stamp is evident in all aspects of the network's programming.
Fox daytime anchor David Asman is formerly of the right-wing Wall Street Journal editorial page and the conservative Manhattan Institute. The host of Fox News Sunday is Tony Snow, a conservative columnist and former chief speechwriter for the first Bush administration. Eric Breindel, previously the editorial-page editor of the right-wing New York Post, was senior vice president of Fox's parent company, News Corporation, until his death in 1998; Fox News Channel's senior vice president is John Moody, a long-time journalist known for his staunch conservative views.
Fox's managing editor is Brit Hume, a veteran TV journalist and contributor to the conservative American Spectator and Weekly Standard magazines. Its top-rated talkshow is hosted by Bill O'Reilly, a columnist for the conservative WorldNetDaily.com and a registered Republican (that is, until a week before the Washington Post published an article revealing his party registration--12/13/00).
The abundance of conservatives and Republicans at Fox News Channel does not seem to be a coincidence. In 1996, Andrew Kirtzman, a respected New York City cable news reporter, was interviewed for a job with Fox and says that management wanted to know what his political affiliation was. "They were afraid I was a Democrat," he told the Village Voice (10/15/96). When Kirtzman refused to tell Fox his party ID, "all employment discussion ended," according to the Voice.
Catherine Crier, who was perceived as one of Fox's most prestigious and credible early hires, was an elected Republican judge before starting a career in journalism. (Crier has since moved on to Court TV.) Pundit Mara Liasson--who is touted as an on-air "liberal" by Fox executives--sits on the board of the conservative human-rights group Freedom House; New York magazine (11/17/97) cited a Fox insider as saying that Liasson assured president Roger Ailes before being hired that she was a Republican.
"Who would be the most likely to cheat at cards-- Bill Clinton or Al Gore?"
--Fox News Channel/Opinion Dynamics poll (5/00)
The most obvious sign of Fox's slant is its heavily right-leaning punditry. Each episode of Special Report with Brit Hume, for example, features a three-person panel of pundits who chat about the day's political news at the end of the show. The most frequent panelist is Fred Barnes, the evangelical Christian supply-sider who edits the Murdoch-owned Weekly Standard. He sits proudly on the rightward flank of the Republican party (and often scolds it for slouching leftwards).
The next most frequent guest is Mort Kondrake, who sits in the middle of the panel. Politically, Kondrake falls at the very rightward edge of the Democratic party-- if not beyond it. As he famously explained in a 1988 New Republic essay (8/29/88), he is a Democrat who is "disgusted with the Democratic Party" and whose main reason for not defecting to the Republicans is that they "have failed to be true to themselves as conservatives." (He was referring to Reagan's deficit spending.)
Rounding out the panel is its third-most-frequent pundit, Mara Liasson, who sits on the opposite side of the table from the conservative Barnes, implicitly identifying her as a liberal. But her liberalism consists of little more than being a woman who works for National Public Radio; she has proposed that "one of the roots of the problem with education today is feminism" (Talk of the Nation, 5/3/01); she declares that "Jesse Jackson gets away with a lot of things that other people don't" (Special Report, 6/21/00); she calls George W. Bush's reversal on carbon dioxide emissions "a small thing" (3/14/01), campaign finance reform "an issue that . . . only 200 people in America care about" (3/19/01) and slavery reparations "pretty much of a non-issue" (3/19/01).
Less frequent Special Report panelists include conservative Washington Times reporter Bill Sammon, centrist Fortune writer Jeff Birnbaum and NPR host Juan Williams. Williams, the only guest who could plausibly claim to be a liberal, was so outraged over attacks on his friend Clarence Thomas that he declared that "liberals have become monsters" (Washington Post, 10/10/91), denouncing the "so-called champions of fairness: liberal politicians, unions, civil rights groups and women's organizations." Indeed, Fox's crew of "liberal" pundits seems almost calculated to be either ineffective left-of-center advocates or conciliatory moderates. Ironically, perhaps the only Fox commentator who consistently presents a strong progressive perspective--that is, critical of corporate power and militarism, and sympathetic to progressive social movements--is FAIR founder Jeff Cohen, a weekly panelist on the weekend media show Fox News Watch.
Meanwhile, Barnes and Kondracke --the conservative Republican and conservative Democrat--make up the entire political spectrum on Fox's weekend political show, The Beltway Boys, where they are generally in agreement as they discuss the week's news.
Even Fox's "left-right" debate show, Hannity & Colmes--whose Crossfire-style format virtually imposes numerical equality between conservatives and "liberals"--can't shake the impression of resembling a Harlem Globetrotters game in which everyone knows which side is supposed to win.
On the right, co-host Sean Hannity is an effective and telegenic ideologue, a protégé of Newt Gingrich and a rising star of conservative talk radio who is perhaps more plugged into the GOP leadership than any media figure besides Rush Limbaugh. (Hannity reportedly received "thunderous applause" when he spoke at a recent closed-door House Republican Conference meeting that is usually closed to the media--U.S. News & World Report, 5/7/01.)
On the left is Alan Colmes, a rather less telegenic former stand-up comic and radio host whose views are slightly left-of-center but who, as a personality, is completely off the radar screen of liberal politics. "I'm quite moderate," he told a reporter when asked to describe his politics (USA Today, 2/1/95). Hannity, a self-described "arch-conservative" (Electronic Media, 8/26/96), joined Fox when the network was started, and personally nominated Colmes to be his on-screen debating opponent (New York Times, 3/1/98). Before the selection was made, the show's working title was Hannity & Liberal to Be Determined--giving some idea of the relative weight each host carries, both on-screen and within the network. Fox sometimes sends a camera down to Hannity's radio studio during the network's daytime news programming, from which he holds forth on the news of the day. Needless to say, Colmes does not receive similar treatment.
"I think what's going on is the Democratic lawyers have flooded Florida. They are afraid of George W. Bush becoming president and instituting tort reform and their gravy train will be over. This is the trial association's full court press to make sure Bush does not win."
--Fox News Channel anchor John Gibson (12/9/00)
Fox has had trouble at times hiding the partisanship of its main news personalities. In 1996, while already a Fox anchor, Tony Snow endorsed Bob Dole for president in the Republican National Committee magazine Rising Tide (New York, 11/17/97). A former speech-writer for the elder Bush, Snow often guest-hosts the Rush Limbaugh show and wrote an unabashedly conservative weekly newspaper column until Fox management recently pressured him to drop it to avoid the appearance of bias (Washington Post, 5/29/01).
At the 2000 Republican convention in Philadelphia, Snow--ostensibly present as a journalist covering a news event--jumped onstage to give a speech to the Republican Youth Caucus after organizers asked him to fill in for a speaker who couldn't make it. (He was later reprimanded by his bosses.) Trent Lott, whose speech directly followed Snow's, began with a cheer of "How about Tony Snow in 2008?" (New York Daily News 8/2/00; Federal News Service, 8/1/00).
Just three days earlier, near the GOP convention, Bill O'Reilly gave the keynote speech at David Horowitz's conservative "Restoration Weekend" event, where he was introduced by Republican congressmember Jack Quinn. Fox's Sean Hannity also spoke at the gathering, described by the Washington Times (6/30/00) as the "premiere political event for conservative thinkers." O'Reilly has had Horowitz on his show six times--to talk about everything from National Public Radio's "left" bias (12/20/00) to Hillary Clinton's "sense of entitlement" (6/22/00) to Horowitz's book on race relations, Hating Whitey (10/4/99).
"There's a certain sameness to the news on the Big Three [networks] and CNN. . . . America is bad, corporations are bad, animal species should be protected, and every cop is a racist killer. That's where 'fair and balanced' [Fox's slogan] comes in. We don't think all corporations are bad, every forest should be saved, every government spending program is good. We're going to be more inquisitive."
--John Moody, Fox News Channel's senior vice-president for news and editorial (Brill's Content, 10/99)
Some mainstream journalists have suggested that Fox's "straight news" is more or less balanced, however slanted its commentary might be. "A close monitoring of the channel over several weeks indicates that the news segments tend to be straightforward, with little hint of political subtext except for stories the news editors feel the 'mainstream' press has either downplayed or ignored," wrote Columbia Journalism Review's Neil Hickey (3-4/98). The fact that Fox's "chat consistently tilts to the conservative side," wrote the Washington Post's Howard Kurtz (2/5/01), "may cast an unwarranted cloud on the news reporting, which tends to be straightforward."
When a New York Times profile of Fox News ran with a headline calling it a "conservative cable channel" (9/18/00), the paper quickly corrected their "error" the following day, explaining that in "attributing a general political viewpoint to the network, the headline exceeded the facts in the article."
Putting aside the question of what genuine "balance" means, there are undoubtedly a few reporters in Fox's Washington bureau--such as White House correspondent Jim Angle--whose stories are more or less indistinguishable from those of their counterparts at the mainstream networks.
But an attentive viewer will notice that there are entire blocks of the network's programming schedule that are set aside for conservative stories. Fox's website offers a regular feature on "political correctness" entitled "Tongue-Tied: A Report From the Front Lines of the Culture Wars," whose logo is a scowling "PC Patrol" officer peering testily through a magnifying glass. It invites readers to write in and "keep us up on examples of PC excess you come across."
Recently the network debuted a weekly half-hour series--Only on Fox--devoted explicitly to right-wing stories. The concept of the show was explained by host Trace Gallagher in the premier episode (5/26/01):
Five years ago, Fox News Channel was launched on the idea that something was wrong with news media--that somehow, somewhere bias found its way into reporting. . . . And it's not just the way you tell a story that can get in the way of the truth. It's the stories you choose to tell. . . . Fox News Channel is committed to being fair and balanced in the coverage of the stories everybody is reporting--and to reporting stories you won't hear anywhere else. Stories you will see only on Fox.
Gallagher then introduced a series of stories about one conservative cause after another: from white firefighters suing Boston's fire department for discrimination, to sawmill workers endangered by Clinton-Gore environmental regulations (without comment from a single supporter of the rules), to property owners who feel threatened by an environmental agreement "signed by President Clinton in 1992." (The agreement was actually signed by George Bush the elder, who was president in 1992--though that didn't stop Fox from using news footage of a smiling Bill Clinton proudly signing an official document that was supposed to be, but wasn't, the environmental pact in question.)
Fox's news specials are equally slanted: Dangerous Places (3/25/01), a special about foreign policy hosted by Newt Gingrich; Heroes, an irregular series hosted by former Republican congressmember John Kasich; and The Real Reagan (11/25/99), a panel discussion on Ronald Reagan, hosted by Tony Snow, in which all six guests were Reagan friends and political aides. Vanishing Freedoms 2: Who Owns America (5/19/01) wandered off into militia-style paranoia, suggesting that the U.N. was "taking over" private property.
There is a formula to Fox's news agenda. "A lot of the people we have hired," Fox executive John Moody explained (Inside Media, 12/11/96) when the network was launched, "have come without the preconceptions of must-do news. There are stories we will sometimes forego in order to do stories we think are more significant. The biggest strength that we have is that Roger Ailes has allowed me to do that; to forego stores that would be 'duty' stories in order to focus on other things."
These "other" stories that Moody has in mind are what make up much of Fox's programming: An embarrassing story about Jesse Jackson's sex life. The latest political-correctness outrage on campus. A one-day mini-scandal about a Democratic senator. Much like talk radio, Fox picks up these tidbits from right-wing outlets like the Washington Times or the Drudge Report and runs with them.
To see how the formula works, consider the recent saga of right-wing activist David Horowitz and his "censored" anti-slavery reparations ad. When some college newspapers refused to carry the ad, and some campuses saw protests against it, the case instantly became a cause celebre on the right. It was the perfect story for Fox: The liberal academic establishment trampling on the free speech of a conservative who merely asked that his views be heard. Within less than a month, Horowitz was on nearly every major Fox show to discuss the issue. (See sidebar.)
Former CBS producer Don Dahler resigned from Fox after executive John Moody ordered him to change a story to play down statistics showing a lack of social progress among blacks. (Moody says the change was journalistically justified--New York, 11/17/97.) According to the Columbia Journalism Review (3-4/98), "several" former Fox employees "complained of 'management sticking their fingers' in the writing and editing of stories to cook the facts to make a story more palatable to right-of-center tastes." Said one: "I've worked at a lot of news organizations and never found that kind of manipulation."
Jed Duvall, a former veteran ABC reporter who left Fox after a year, told New York (11/17/97): "I'll never forget the morning that one producer came up to me, and, rubbing her hands like Uriah Heep, said, 'Let's have something on Whitewater today.' That sort of thing doesn't happen at a professional news organization." Indeed, Fox's signature political news show, Special Report with Brit Hume, was originally created as a daily one-hour update devoted to the 1998 Clinton sex scandal.
"In the D.C. bureau [at ABC], we always had to worry what the lead story would be in the New York Times, and God forbid if we didn't have that story. Now we don't care if we have that story." Stories favored by the journalistic establishment, Kim Hume says, are "all mushy, like AIDS, or all silly, like Head Start. They want to give publicity to people they think are doing good."
--New York magazine(11/17/97) quoting Kim Hume, Fox News Channel Washington bureau chief
One of the most partisan features on Fox is a daily segment on Special Report called "The Political Grapevine." Billed as "the most scintillating two minutes in television," the Grapevine is a kind of right-wing hot-sheet. It features Brit Hume at the anchor's desk reading off a series of gossipy items culled from other, often right-wing, news outlets.
The key to the Grapevine is its story selection, and there is nothing subtle about it. Almost every item carries an unmistakable partisan message: Democrats, environmentalists and Hollywood liberals are the perennial villains (or the butts of the joke), while Republicans are shown either as targets of unfair attacks or heroes who can do no wrong. Political correctness run amok, the "liberal bias" of the mainstream media and the chicanery of civil rights groups all figure prominently.
When Rep. Patrick Kennedy tussled with airport security (3/21/01), Democrat Pete Stark used intemperate language (4/18/01) and California Gov. Gray Davis uttered a string of curse words (4/18/01), it made it onto the Grapevine. When the Sacramento Bee ran a series on the shortcomings of the big environmental groups, its findings earned a mention on the Grapevine (4/21/01). When it emerged that Al Gore booster Ben Affleck didn't bother to vote in last year's election, you heard about it on the Grapevine (4/25/01).
Republicans are treated differently. "Since [New York's] Rudolph Giuliani became the mayor," one item cheered (4/24/01), "the streets are cleaner and safer, and tourism reigns supreme in Times Square." When George W. Bush ordered men to wear a coat and tie to enter the Oval Office, Grapevine (5/14/01) noted that "his father had a similar reverence for the office," while "President Clinton used to come into the Oval Office in running shorts . . . and sometimes he did not remain fully clothed while he was there."
The success of the Grapevine has apparently inspired a spin-off on Fox's Sunday morning show. Fox News Sunday anchor Tony Snow recently inaugurated "Below the Fold," a weekly roundup of "unheralded political stories" that is basically identical to Grapevine, including the conservative spin. When one Below the Fold item (4/15/01) mentioned that Barbra Streisand was reportedly thinking of starting up "a cable TV network devoted exclusively to Democratic viewpoints," Snow couldn't resist adding that the singer came up with the idea "apparently believing such a thing doesn't exist already."
Fox News Channel is "not a conservative network!" roars Fox News Channel chairman Ailes. "I absolutely, totally deny it. . . . The fact is that Rupert [Murdoch] and I and, by the way, the vast majority of the American people, believe that most of the news tilts to the left," he says. Fox's mission is "to provide a little more balance to the news" and "to go cover some stories that the mainstream media won't cover."
--Brill's Content (10/99) quoting Roger Ailes
To hear the network's bigwigs tell it, it's not Fox that's being biased when it puts conservative fare on heavy rotation. It's the "liberal media" that are biased when they fail to do so. Fox's entire editorial philosophy revolves around the idea that the mainstream media have a liberal bias that Fox is obligated to rectify.
In interviews, Ailes and other Fox executives often expound this philosophy, sometimes with bizarre results. Ailes once told the New York Times (10/7/96) that he and Fox executive John Moody had both noticed a pattern in the weekly newsmagazines: They often cover religion, "but it's always a story that beats up on Jesus." "They call him a cult figure of his time, some kind of crazy fool," Ailes continued. "And it's as if they go out and try to find evidence to trash him." Moody added that two recent Time and Newsweek articles on Jesus "really bordered on the sacrilegious."
But the core of Fox's critique is the notion that the mainstream media just don't tell the conservative side of the story. This is the premise Fox executives start from when they defend their own network: If Fox appears conservative, they argue, it's only because the country has grown so accustomed to the left-leaning media that a truly balanced network seems to lean right. "The reason you may believe it tips to the right is you're stunned at seeing so many conservatives," Ailes once told a reporter (Washington Post, 2/5/01).
But Ailes and his colleagues have trouble backing up these claims with actual facts. He's fond of calling Bob Novak the only conservative on CNN--"that's the only guy they hired that was to the right!" (Charlie Rose, 5/22/01) --but he ignores Tucker Carlson, Kate O'Beirne and Mary Matalin (who recently left for the White House), not to mention past conservative stars such as Lynne Cheney, Mona Charen, John Sununu and, of course, Pat Buchanan, perhaps the most right-wing figure in national politics and an 18-year veteran of Crossfire (minus the occasional hiatus to run for president).
According to Bill O'Reilly, Fox "gives voice to people who can't get on other networks. When was the last time you saw pro-life people [on other networks] unless they shot somebody?" (Philadelphia Inquirer, 4/10/01). O'Reilly's question is easily answered; in the last three years, the National Right to Life Committee's spokespeople have appeared on CNN 21 times (compared with 16 appearances for their main counterpart, the National Abortion Rights Action League).
In a 1999 Washington Post profile (3/26/99), Ailes offered another example. He said he was particularly proud of a three-part series on education that Fox had recently aired, which reported that "many educators believe self-esteem teaching is harmful" to students. "The mainstream media will never cover that story," Ailes told the Post. "I've seen 10,000 stories on education and I've never seen one that didn't say the federal government needed to spend more money on education."
But just weeks prior to Ailes' interview, CNN's weekly Newsstand series (2/28/99) aired a glowing profile of an upstate New York business executive who had turned around a troubled inner-city elementary school "by bringing the lessons of the boardroom into the classroom." CNN's report came complete with soundbites from a conservative education advocate ("the unions are a major impediment to education reform") and lines from host Jeff Greenfield like, "Critics have said that for decades, the public education system has behaved like an entrenched monopoly with little or no incentive to improve its performance." The piece would have warmed the heart of any conservative education reformer.
The difference between the two networks is that while such conservative-friendly fare airs on CNN some of the time, Fox has oriented its whole network around it. Contrary to what Ailes and other right-wing media critics say, the agenda of CNN and its fellow mainstream outlets is not liberal or conservative, but staunchly centrist. The perspectives they value most are those of the bipartisan establishment middle, the same views that make up the mainstream corporate consensus that media publishers and executives are themselves a part of. It's politicians who stake out centrist, pro-business positions within their parties who win the adulation of the Washington press corps, like John McCain and Joe Lieberman during the 2000 campaign. Both parties are constantly urged by the media to "move to the center."
Defenders of Fox might argue that its brand of conservative-tilted programming fills a void, since it represents a form of ideologically hard-edged news seldom seen in the centrist media. But the same point could be made on the other side of the spectrum: Just as conservative stories don't always make it onto CNN, neither do stories that matter to the left. A left-wing version of Fox might run frequent updates on the Mumia Abu-Jamal case, the dangers of depleted uranium weapons or the benefits of single-payer health care. That would contrast sharply with CNN--but it wouldn't justify calling CNN "right-wing" or "conservative." Fox's "leftist" accusations are equally unfounded.
At about the same time that Fox was taking a deep interest in the David Horowitz ad controversy, the Boston Globe refused to run an ad criticizing the office supply company Staples for its use of non-recycled paper. Though the Globe is arguably a more important venue for debate than any number of college papers, the case was not reported by either Fox or CNN. Indeed, until a FAIR letter-writing campaign forced the Globe ombudsman to address the issue (6/11/01), only one publication in the Nexis news database reported it at all (Sacramento Bee, 4/12/01).
"The media are not disposed toward Republican presidents--any Republican president--and really never have been."
--Brit Hume, Fox News Channel managing editor (Washington Post, 9/25/00)
Fox is sometimes forced to juggle two identities--Republican and conservative--that are not always the same. A recent example was the standoff over the downed American spy plane in China. Following appearances on Special Report by conservatives William Kristol (4/9/01) and Fred Barnes (4/11/01), who were critical of Bush for his unexpectedly conciliatory handling of the crisis, Fox (4/13/01) was quick to run a slew of letters from outraged Republican viewers accusing the pundits of trying to "undermine a president of their own party." They "never cut him a bit of slack," one viewer wrote. "Who needs Dan Rather when you have Mr. Kristol to bring down our president?"
Fox's sensitivity to Republican complaints came into the open during the 2000 presidential campaign when Tony Snow was the target of a barrage of criticism from posters to the far-right website FreeRepublic.com, who accused him of being too negative about the Bush campaign in his columns and on Fox News Channel.
Snow responded to the Freepers, as the site's conservative contributors call themselves, with a long and detailed apologia, highlighting every pro-Bush aspect of his work in excruciating detail. Discussing his syndicated conservative column, he wrote:
I have found over the years that the best way to be friendly to any politician is to be honest. Having said that, I've hardly been hostile to Bush in recent columns. Yes, I have criticized him this year, but no serious reader could possibly believe Gore has gotten the best of the exchange.
Just check out the two most recent columns. A piece on "specifics" notes that Gore offers virtually no specifics to voters and the few he mentions are nuts. There's plenty of grist there for Bush fans and the Bush campaign. The most recent defends Bush in the Adam Clymer affair.
In response to a writer who was irate at a video clip showing a Bush gaffe, Snow replied: "Yes, we carried a Bush gaffe at the end. It was funny, not damaging to the candidate."
And perhaps most tellingly, he described the strategy he had recently used on Fox News Sunday (9/10/00) to interview a pair of guests about the presidential campaign-- the first an aide to Bill Clinton, the second the Republican governor of Pennsylvania:
1) We opened with a tough interview of John Podesta, taking Clinton to task for a series of things (including hate crimes legislation) and asking some tough questions about Gore's energy and health-care policies.
2) Tom Ridge came next. We tried to get him to fire away at Clinton/Gore corruption. He wouldn't do it. We tried to get him to urge a more openly conservative campaign by Bush. He wouldn't do it. If you have complaints about such matters, I suggest you write the Bush campaign, not Fox News Channel.
In other words, Snow admits he was trying to put the Democratic guest on the defensive about Clinton--while goading the Republican into playing offense against Clinton. (The episode is a perfect example of Fox's notion of balance: attacking Democrats and liberals on substance while challenging Repub-licans and conservatives only on tactics.) In closing the memo, Snow wrote, "Parting thoughts: I made fun of the United Nations." He concluded: "I have a hard time finding anything in that lineup that Freepers would consider treasonous."
"Fair and balanced, as always."
--Fox News slogan
Some have suggested that Fox's conservative point of view and its Republican leanings render the network inherently unworthy as a news outlet. FAIR believes that view is misguided. The United States is unusual, perhaps even unique, in having a journalistic culture so fiercely wedded to the elusive notion of "objective" news (an idea of relatively recent historical vintage even in the U.S.). In Great Britain, papers like the conservative Times of London and the left-leaning Guardian deliver consistently excellent coverage while making no secret of their respective points of view. There's nothing keeping American journalists from doing the same.
If anything, it is partly the disingenuous claim to objectivity that is corroding the integrity of the news business. American journalists claim to represent all political views with an open mind, yet in practice a narrow bipartisan centrism excludes dissenting points of view: No major newspaper editorial page opposed NAFTA; virtually all endorse U.S. airstrikes on Iraq; and single-payer health care proposals find almost no backers among them.
With the ascendance of Fox News Channel, we now have a national conservative TV network in addition to the established centrist outlets. But like the mainstream networks, Fox refuses to admit its political point of view. The result is a skewed center-to-right media spectrum made worse by the refusal to acknowledge any tilt at all.
Fox could potentially represent a valuable contribution to the journalistic mix if it admitted it had a conservative point of view, if it beefed up its hard news and investigative coverage (and cut back on the tabloid sensationalism), and if there were an openly left-leaning TV news channel capable of balancing both Fox's conservatism and CNN's centrism.
None of these three things appears likely to happen in the foreseeable future.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SIDEBAR:
Toeing the Line on Special Report
For some, the free market is a religion. That seems true for Fox News reporter Brit Hume, who has made no secret of what he thinks about the idea of caps on wholesale electricity prices in California. Hume commented on Fox (5/29/01) that "no one with an economics degree that I know" would support price caps for California.
In fact, 10 prominent mainstream economists wrote a letter to George W. Bush endorsing the idea. "We are mindful of the potential dangers of applying a simple price cap," they wrote (New York Times, 5/30/01). "But California's electricity markets are not characterized by effective competition." The letter added that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's "failure to act now will have dire consequences for the state of California." Paul Krugman, one of the country's most prominent economists, had by that point written six columns in the New York Times calling for energy price caps.
But on Fox, laissez-faire orthodoxy was enforced. When Jeff Birnbaum, Washington bureau chief of Fortune magazine and a frequent guest on Special Report with Brit Hume, suggested (5/29/01) that price caps "might help the blackouts through this summer," this view was rejected by both of the other panelists, Morton Kondracke and Bill Kristol. Hume, acting as moderator, derided Birnbaum for his deviation: "Did you ever have any economics in college? . . . There are books . . . that could help you."
A day later (5/30/01), Birnbaum came on the show to deliver what can only be described as a recantation: "I consulted my Economics 101, and I made a mistake last night when I spoke," he said. "Price caps are definitely the wrong economic answer. It could lead to a spreading energy gap and problem beyond California's borders and a long-term energy problem that would clearly be a serious political and substantive problem for the Bush administration."
"No apology required," was Hume's response. But one got the definite impression that toeing the ideological line is required on Special Report.
--Peter Hart
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SIDEBAR:
An Obsession That Only Goes So Far
One of Fox News Channel's favorite recent stories involved a newspaper ad that claimed African-Americans benefited from slavery, and owed America for the favor. The ad's author, conservative activist David Horowitz, claimed to be a victim of censorship and "political correctness" because a number of college newspapers refused to publish his ad, which argued against the idea of slavery reparations. Fox saw this as a major issue: Horowitz and his ad were mentioned at least 21 times on the network between March 6 and April 3.
On Fox News Sunday (3/25/01), the network's Sunday-morning equivalent of Meet the Press, interviews with Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham and Sen. Joseph Lieberman were incongruously followed by a segment featuring a largely unknown reparations activist and David Horowitz, in a Crossfire-style debate about Horowitz's rejected ad.
On Special Report with Brit Hume, the Horowitz ad became the subject of at least nine "Grapevine" items in less than a month. The ad was also the subject of Hume's lead question to conservative columnist John Leo when he appeared for a one-on-one interview (3/23/01). Afterward, Hume put the Horowitz issue to the show's all-star panel of pundits; all three pundits agreed that campus liberals were squelching debate. Mara Liasson argued that reparations are "pretty much of a non-issue" and Horowitz's ad was not "nearly as bad as the kind of hate speech you hear about in other cases," while Mort Kondracke explained that "there's nothing racist in this."
On Hannity & Colmes (3/26/01), the issue was: "Has David Horowitz's freedom of speech become a victim of political correctness?" On The O'Reilly Factor (3/6/01), it was Horowitz and host Bill O'Reilly interrogating a reparations activist from Mobile, Alabama. ("That's my tax money!" O'Reilly exclaimed.) The Edge with Paula Zahn brought Horowitz on three times within a month to discuss the same subject.
But there was one twist to the Horowitz story that Fox couldn't be bothered to report. When Horowitz's ad was offered to the Daily Princetonian in April, the paper ran it--along with an editorial (4/4/01) describing its ideas as racist and promising to donate the ad's proceeds to the local chapter of the Urban League. Horowitz, the free-speech crusader, refused to pay his bill unless the paper's editors publicly apologized for their hurtful words: "Its slanders contribute to the atmosphere of intolerance and hate towards conservatives," a statement from his office read.
Suddenly Fox lost interest in the Horowitz case. After a month of running twice-weekly updates about college papers that were refusing the ad, Special Report with Brit Hume ignored the Princeton episode. None of the network's major shows transcribed in the Nexis database reported Horowitz's tiff with the paper. No editor from the Princetonian was invited on The O'Reilly Factor to debate whether or not Horowitz was being a hypocrite. When their favorite free-speech martyr suddenly looked like a censor, it was a story Fox just didn't want to pursue.
http://www.fair.org/extra/0108/fox-main.html
BOREALIS
The Saddam Files (II): Sickening Cynicism
The new Iraqi government is learning from the White House.
When it talks about the rule of law, it really means the rule of lawyers
WEB EXCLUSIVE COMMENTARY
By Christopher Dickey
Newsweek
Updated: 10:30 a.m. ET July 09, 2004
July 8, 2004 - If there’s an outcry from Iraq’s population about the new Baghdad government’s self-decreed power to impose martial law, it’s probably the Arabic equivalent of hip-hip-hooray—and from all sides. Polls show that most Iraqis, hoping for the best, would be happy to see any measure that might create order out of the chaos that America has brought them. The insurgents aren’t worried, either. They’re hoping for the worst, and the more often martial law is applied, the more recruits will come to their ranks, or so they think.
Personally, I hope like hell that order wins out, not least because I’ll be back in Baghdad in a few days. So I’m not going to criticize CIA-anointed Prime Minister Ayad Allawi for giving himself the legalistic right to re-impose curfews, bug phones, confiscate money and property, restrict political gatherings and take direct command of security forces in selected hot spots. His security forces (and he hopes to have a bunch of them) can search and detain people without any warrants, and, when he sees fit, Allawi can take direct command.
After all—and this is not meant ironically—there are a few checks and balances, like approvals from the president and the two vice presidents, and the possibility of judicial review. And Allawi does have the inestimable advantage that any abuse he could inflict on his countrymen pales by comparison with Saddam Hussein’s 34-year reign of terror.
Still, when Allawi starts talking about “the rule of law,” as he’s done a lot these last few days, it makes me uneasy. Because that’s not really what we’re looking at. This martial-law decree is an imitation of legislation that’s backed up by foreign firepower, and the test of its legitimacy is not in the courts, it’s in the results: does it look good enough to keep Allawi’s government from being condemned by domestic and international opinion? Does it give him the leeway to do whatever he thinks is necessary whenever and wherever he chooses? The jury is out. In fact, it hasn’t even been impaneled.
But one thing is certain, if Allawi has learned any lessons from his American and British patrons these last dozen years, it’s that the rule of law is much less important to them than the rule of lawyers, and it’s only the finagled fine points of obfuscation and sophistry that pass for justice whenever they look at Iraq.
Two critical examples stand out:
Saddam’s Crimes: When Dick Cheney was secretary of Defense in 1991, the Pentagon commissioned a report about Saddam Hussein’s savage and systematic war crimes. It’s a fascinating document, not only for what it reveals about the Butcher of Baghdad’s brutality, which was nauseating, we know, but for what it suggests about the cynicism of our own leaders, which was also pretty sickening.
After Saddam’s 1990 invasion of Kuwait, President George H.W. Bush loved to describe Saddam as a war criminal, even “Hitler revisited.” But when Operation Desert Storm ended in 1991, so did the rhetoric. A report on atrocities was compiled quietly by two teams of military lawyers specializing in international law under the auspices of the U.S. Army’s War Crimes Documentation Center of the Office of the Judge Advocate General.
Completed and submitted on Jan. 8, 1992, it documented “at least two dozen torture sites” set up by the Iraqis in Kuwaiti police stations and “sports facilities.” (Saddam’s corps of interrogators and torturers seemed to enjoy their work. One document they left behind suggested Kuwaiti dissidents “should be beheaded and we should be artistic in causing harm to them.”) Among these modern Torquemadas’ tools of the trade were electric drills and acid baths. According to the same report, the 24 American prisoners of war were beaten savagely “with fists, batons, rifle butts,” sexually molested (two of the prisoners were women, but they may not have been the only ones abused in this way), and in several cases were tortured with electrodes attached to their heads. The Iraqi interrogators called that device “the talkman.”
The use of poison gas, the taking of hostages for human shields, the mass deportations, the wholesale murder of civilians—these are all crimes well defined under international treaties that Iraq signed and Saddam utterly ignored. But Cheney’s Pentagon, instead of releasing this devastating report, much less acting on it, just stamped it SECRET instead.
It was a campaign year, and the report was received, inconveniently, just weeks before the New Hampshire primary. Later, in July 1992, Elaine Sciolino wrote in The New York Times that the Pentagon was sitting on the document since Desert Storm was supposed to have been a great victory for George H.W. Bush and this report “would focus attention on the fact that Mr. Hussein is still in power.” Sciolino quoted a senior administration official saying “the prevailing view is that this is not a matter of urgency.” In a follow-up story, several months later, The Washington Post quoted an official from 41’s administration saying “some people were concerned that if we released it during the campaign, people would say, ‘Why don’t you bring this guy to justice?’”
Cheney’s office has been queried about this by NEWSWEEK several times since he became vice president (I first wrote about it in August 2001), and his staffers have suggested he might not even have seen the report. The key officer in charge of preparing it at the Pentagon has since died, so he can’t help us much. I asked for confirmation from a State Department official who was intimately involved with gathering the documentation of Saddam’s atrocities in 1991. He opened his hand in a gesture of surrender. He had no idea whether Cheney made the decision to deep-six the document. When he asked lower Pentagon officials what was happening at the time, he recalls, “They said ‘We aren’t yet at a suitable moment to pursue these things. We need to have them ready when the timing is right'.”
The Clinton administration declassified the war-crimes report almost immediately. But it never found the right time to confront Saddam either. The dictator was never charged with war crimes or crimes against humanity in an international court, despite the mountains of evidence against him. And, take note, he still hasn’t been. This Bush administration doesn’t like international courts. So the slap-dash Iraqi tribunal that showed off Saddam last week is left in the odd position of trying to judge this monster on the basis of laws confected from the dictator’s own legal code, new decrees and selective gleanings from international jurisprudence. One hates to say Saddam has a point, but when he called his hearing political theater, he was just stating a fact.
Weapons of Mass Destruction: When George W. Bush took office in January 2001, with Cheney aboard, the new president wanted to get rid of Saddam for lots of reasons, but his crimes against humanity were not high on the list. The issue, especially post-9/11, was terrorism and weapons of mass destruction. The Bush administration’s lawyers were blithely informing it that quaint old clauses in the Geneva Conventions could be ignored. They were authorizing something very much like torture to interrogate prisoners detained in geographical loopholes like Guantanamo, and concluded some American citizens could be held with no rights at all. In short, the laws that you or I thought ruled our lives were treated as juridical nuisances. (Fortunately the Supreme Court has started correcting some of those abuses.)
In order to lay the groundwork for a full-scale war with Iraq, the Bush administration and the Blair government in Britain wanted the legal cover provided by the United Nations. So President Bush gave what may have been the finest speech of his life before the General Assembly in September 2002, calling on the organization to shoulder its responsibilities. And it did. After many tough weeks of negotiating, Security Council Resolution 1441 provided a legal framework—backed by a firm threat of force—compelling Saddam to allow weapons inspectors back into his country and give them free rein.
The document’s not easy reading, but it’s clear enough. The key words are “material breach” of various United Nations’ resolutions. Saddam had already crossed that threshold, but this gave him one last chance to survive. If any new example of material breach were found—meaning blatant lies about his weapons program, or, more importantly, solid evidence that stockpiles of WMD still existed—then it was up to the U.N. inspectors to say so, and Iraq would face “serious consequences,” meaning attack by what probably would have been a united global coalition.
In the event, the weapons inspectors did not find stockpiles of forbidden WMD. And, as we know, none have been discovered since. So the inspectors did not declare Saddam Hussein in material breach because they couldn’t prove that he was—and, by all indications, he was not. There was, according to what we knew then, and also what we know now, no casus belli under the resolution.
But Bush and Blair forged ahead. “I don’t think they wanted any cooperation,” says one State Department official who was privy to the inside show. “They would have preferred more blatant justification for what they wanted to do. But this administration intended to get rid of Saddam, whatever.”
The British are still agonizing about all this. Last week the Blair government asked judges to stall rather than rule, belatedly, on the legality of the war on Iraq. At the same time, Blair told a parliamentary committee that he had “to accept we haven’t found [weapons of mass destruction] and we may never find them.”
Now, those readers who’ve gotten this far may be wondering, as Shadowland readers sometimes do, who are the good guys and who are the bad guys. Saddam was evil, and he was toppled. Wasn’t that the right thing to do, even if for the wrong reasons?
Not at the price. The rule of law—the sense that justice will be done, not simply revenge taken or political expediency served—was weakened at every step along the road to Baghdad. The Bush administration had faith it was doing the right thing, believing that its good intentions and its deft lawyers would allow it to ignore any advice or evidence to the contrary. As one young Army officer told me on the eve of war, the future of the region depended not “on the rule of law [but] the law of averages.” As a result, all of us have lost.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5396356/site/newsweek/
BOREALIS
Saudis facing return of radicals
Young Iraq veterans join underground
By Craig Whitlock
Washingtonpost.com
Updated: 11:09 p.m. ET July 10, 2004
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia - An increasing number of Saudis who crossed the border into Iraq to fight the U.S.-led military occupation are returning home to plot attacks against the Saudi government and Western targets in the desert kingdom, according to Western counterterrorism officials and Saudis with ties to militant groups.
The Iraq veterans are serving as fresh recruits for an underground network in Saudi Arabia that, until recently, was led by an older generation of fighters that had trained in Afghanistan and was closely connected to al Qaeda and its founder, Saudi native Osama bin Laden. Many of those leaders have been killed or captured in recent months by Saudi security forces.
Today, the proclaimed new chief of the primary militant group in the kingdom is Saleh Awfi, 33, a Saudi who journeyed north last year to join Ansar al-Islam, an Islamic radical group in Iraq that the U.S. government has branded as a terrorist organization. Awfi stayed for a few months, barely surviving U.S. aerial bombardment, before deciding to return and take up arms in his home country, according to a former Saudi radical who met with Awfi last year.
Other Saudis are returning after spending time in newly established training camps across the Red Sea in remote parts of Sudan where central government influence is weak, said a European intelligence official whose government is advising Saudi officials on their domestic terrorist threat.
For years, the religiously conservative Saudi royal family considered itself immune to attacks from Islamic extremists, but since May 2003, armed insurgents have shaken the government with a series of bombings and shootings resulting in more than 80 deaths.
The violence has helped drive oil prices to record highs, due to concern that the radicals will target pipelines or refineries.
The Saudi government sealed its border with Iraq last year and has played down evidence that Saudi radicals have contributed to the insurgency there. But Western counterterrorism officials and diplomats here said a small but significant number of Saudi veterans of the fight in Iraq have already made their way back and are helping carry out attacks in the kingdom.
Some Western officials express fear that the homecoming will grow if Iraq stabilizes. They also say they worry that the trend could become an echo of the 1990s, when thousands of Saudis traveled to Afghanistan to enlist in training camps sponsored by al Qaeda and other Islamic groups. Many of those radicals were dispatched around the world to launch attacks, including the Sept. 11, 2001, hijackings in the United States.
After the Iraq insurgency is over, "there will be people who are freshly trained in the art of guerrilla warfare," said a Western diplomat who spoke on condition of anonymity. "It's a real concern. How big a concern? I don't know. It clearly doesn't take too many to do a lot of damage."
Young leaders fill ranks
Recent statements from Saudi militants underscore the Iraq connection. A cell that asserted responsibility last month for the beheading of Paul M. Johnson Jr., a Lockheed Martin Corp. employee kidnapped in Riyadh, called itself the Fallujah Brigade of a broader group known as al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. Fallujah is a city west of Baghdad where insurgents have repeatedly clashed with U.S. forces.
The leader of that cell, Abdulaziz Muqrin, who was killed three weeks ago in a shootout with security forces, suggested in a statement that appeared on the Internet last fall that there was substantial crossover between the group in Saudi Arabia and foreign fighters in Iraq. "We are exerting our efforts there," Muqrin wrote, according to Janes Intelligence Review, a London-based publication.
Another example of Saudi fighters coming home from Iraq emerged in late June, when Othman Amri surrendered to Saudi officials under a recently declared amnesty program. Amri had been No. 19 on a list of the kingdom's 26 most wanted terrorism suspects. His family told Saudi reporters that he spent much of last year in Iraq as part of the insurgency there.
Like their compatriots in Iraq, cells operating in Saudi Arabia have repeatedly stated that their primary aim is to drive out all "infidels," including more than 100,000 Western expatriates who help run the country's oil industry and whose military and technical support is crucial to the Saudi government.
Although the border with Iraq is officially closed, many Saudi fighters are still finding their way back into the kingdom. Saudi officials said the nation's 900-mile border with Yemen has become an even more favored reentry point. Officials have reported that border guards have confiscated tons of explosives and ammunition from smugglers. In response, the Saudi government has begun construction of a concrete barrier along the Yemeni border, which runs through an especially desolate stretch of desert and mountains.
The frequency of attacks within Saudi Arabia has picked up in the past two months, as attackers have conducted deadly raids on Western compounds in Khobar and blown up a police building in Riyadh. In May, they began to target individual Westerners in Riyadh, killing a German man at a bank machine and stalking two Americans before fatally shooting them at their homes.
Saudi security forces have arrested hundreds of alleged radicals and sympathizers but largely have been unable to stop the violence since it ignited 14 months ago. Saudi leaders said they are optimistic, however, that their efforts reached a turning point when security forces killed Muqrin and three of his lieutenants in a shootout in Riyadh. Since then, security forces have gone on the offensive and have rounded up numerous other suspects by identifying several hideouts they used in the Riyadh area.
Saudi security officials said they have disrupted each of the five cells known to exist in the kingdom. Although 12 of the government's 26 most wanted terrorist suspects remain at large, Western and Saudi counterterrorism officials said the movement has been dealt a heavy blow.
"The terrorist networks created over the past few years have been almost entirely compromised and will have to be rebuilt largely from scratch," said Nawaf Obaid, a Riyadh-based security consultant. "There are no longer any known senior, battle-hardened bin Laden associates left to run the organization or create new cells."
Most of the original architects of that network were veterans of al Qaeda camps in Afghanistan, including several who were personal acquaintances of bin Laden, according to Saudi officials.
The Saudi government has long drawn criticism for allowing Islamic extremism to flourish within the kingdom and encouraging it abroad. Many Saudi leaders have minimized their responsibility, arguing that the insurgents became radicalized only after leaving the country.
Prince Saud Faisal, the Saudi foreign minister, told reporters in Jiddah last month that "the university of Afghanistan" had brainwashed many Saudis. "They were being mentally reformed and turned into killing machines," he said.
But other officials said most of the leaders trained in Afghanistan have been killed or captured, creating a void that is being filled by younger people whose primary fighting experience comes from Iraq or North Africa, or who have never been out of Saudi Arabia.
"The Afghanistan group is starting to get aged," the Western diplomat said. "A lot of them are now out of the system. I don't know how many of those guys are really left."
Other analysts said the Afghan veterans presented a more serious threat and questioned the ability of their replacements.
"You have two distinct generations," said Ramzi Khoury, a journalist who tracks violent extremists in the kingdom. "You have those guys who came from Afghanistan, who are very well trained, very effective, very well brainwashed. And you have the kids. The kids are angry and depressed, angry over what's going on in Palestine and Iraq."
Weakness on both sides
Awfi, the apparent new leader of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, traveled to Afghanistan before Sept. 11, 2001 and met with bin Laden, according to interviews his family has given to Saudi reporters. More recently, he spent time in northern Iraq, but returned to Saudi Arabia after he was nearly killed during the U.S. invasion, according to Mohsen Awajy, a lawyer and former Saudi radical who said he was contacted by Awfi last year.
Although Awfi's militant resume looks impressive on paper, his ascension is a sign that the group has become severely weakened, Awajy said. "If he's going to be the next leader of al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia," he said, "then they are in big trouble, because he has no capability as a leader."
The Saudi security forces, however, have been confronted by weaknesses of their own. Counterterrorism experts and government officials said the kingdom was ill-prepared to respond to terrorism, in part because the government mistakenly assumed it would never become a target.
That began to change in May 2003, as radicals launched attacks not just against Westerners, but also against Saudi citizens and the government.
"The Saudi government was jolted out of its denial," said Jonathan Stevenson, senior fellow for counterterrorism at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London.
Although the government now says it takes terrorism much more seriously, its military and security forces were not trained or equipped to handle the threat and have had a hard time adjusting.
More than a dozen Saudi police officers and National Guardsmen have died in shootouts, in many cases because they were outgunned. In May, three of four gunmen who killed 22 people and took hostages in a Western office and residential compound in Khobar escaped, even though they were surrounded by hundreds of security forces, including a special anti-terrorist Saudi SWAT team.
"Our security apparatus is not well trained in combating terrorism, but they are learning," Ibrahim Alebaji, a former deputy interior minister, told Saudi television last month.
Saudi Arabia's rulers have requested assistance from Western governments to help with training and intelligence gathering. Western counterterrorism officials said the Saudi capability to fight terrorism was improving, but that the kingdom still needed to reorganize its many overlapping military, law-enforcement and security agencies.
"Saudi Arabia did not believe -- or did not want to believe -- that it had a problem for a long time," said a German intelligence official who spoke on condition of anonymity. "They are not underestimating the problem any longer . . . But they first need to create the structures to fight the problem."
Saudi officials used to bristle at such critiques, but have begun to acknowledge the need to revamp their anti-terrorism bureaucracy. Two weeks ago, Prince Saud of the Foreign Ministry met with Western diplomats and businessmen in Jiddah to reassure them that the government recognized the challenge.
"He was quite explicit," said another Western diplomat who attended the meeting and also spoke on condition of anonymity. "He said, 'Yes, we have made mistakes. And we are learning from those mistakes.'"
Technical assistance from the West has already produced results. A newly trained Saudi forensics unit was recently able to confirm, based on physical evidence, that a single al Qaeda cell was responsible for carrying out at least five separate attacks, according to a Western official.
Researchers Robert Thomason and Margot Williams in Washington contributed to this report.
BOREALIS
Administration misleading us ???
BOREALIS
Would your running mate be qualified......
BOREALIS
Kenny boy in cuffs??
BOREALIS
Alleged Hacker Now Works for Microsoft
Fri Jul 9, 6:05 PM ET
By ALLISON LINN, AP Business Writer
SEATTLE - A man accused of hacking into search engine company AltaVista's computer systems about two years ago is now employed by Microsoft Corp., reportedly working on search technology.
Laurent Chavet, 29, was arrested by FBI (news - web sites) agents a week ago in Redmond, Wash., acting on a warrant issued in San Francisco.
Federal prosecutors allege that Chavet hacked into AltaVista's computer system to obtain software blueprints called source code and recklessly caused damage to AltaVista's computers.
Microsoft spokeswoman Tami Begasse said Friday that Chavet, who lives in suburban Kirkland, is an employee of Microsoft. She declined further comment on the nature of Chavet's employment or when he started at the company, citing Microsoft policy on not discussing personnel matters.
Generally speaking, Begasse said: "We're confident in our policies and procedures we have in place to protect our code and to ensure that employees do not bring third party code into the work place."
A woman who answered the phone at Chavet's house Friday said he would have no comment.
The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, citing anonymous sources, reported that Chavet had been working on Microsoft's MSN Search effort.
In a research paper on search technology published in IBM Systems Journal, Chavet is listed as a search expert who works at Microsoft and was previously with AltaVista.
In 2003, AltaVista, based in Sunnyvale, Calif., was acquired by search company Overture Services, Inc., which in turn was acquired by Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO - news) later that year. Microsoft's MSN Web site currently uses both Overture's and Yahoo's search technology.
But the Redmond company has begun an aggressive effort to develop its own search technology as it tries to compete with search engine leaders Google Inc. and Yahoo. Microsoft, which has acknowledged it lags in search, hopes to play catch-up with a broad-based search tool that allows users to also scour through e-mails, documents and even big databases.
Court documents say Chavet worked at AltaVista from approximately June 1999 to February 2002. Beginning in late March 2002, the U.S. attorney's office alleges in court documents, Chavet began accessing AltaVista's computers without permission, causing about $5,000 in damage over a one-year period.
A spokeswoman for Overture declined to comment on Chavet's case. Assistant U.S. Attorney Chris Sonderby, who is in charge of the California unit that is prosecuting the case, told The Associated Press that the allegations against Chavet "do not pertain to Microsoft."
Chavet was released on a $10,000 bond and is expected to make a court appearance July 20 in San Francisco. Both charges carry a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&ncid=1212&e=4&u=/ap/20040709/ap_on_hi_te/hac...
BOREALIS
RE: The Buck stops here"
When is the last time we heard a President say "THE BUCK STOPS HERE"?
THE BUCK STOPS HERE"
The saying "the buck stops here" derives from the slang expression "pass the buck" which means passing the responsibility on to someone else. The latter expression is said to have originated with the game of poker, in which a marker or counter, frequently in frontier days a knife with a buckhorn handle, was used to indicate the person whose turn it was to deal. If the player did not wish to deal he could pass the responsibility by passing the "buck," as the counter came to be called, to the next player.*
On more than one occasion President Truman referred to the desk sign in public statements. For example, in an address at the National War College on December 19, 1952 Mr. Truman said, "You know, it's easy for the Monday morning quarterback to say what the coach should have done, after the game is over. But when the decision is up before you -- and on my desk I have a motto which says The Buck Stops Here' -- the decision has to be made." In his farewell address to the American people given in January 1953, President Truman referred to this concept very specifically in asserting that,
"The President--whoever he is--has to decide.
He can't pass the buck to anybody.
No one else can do the deciding for him. That's his job.
President Truman
BOREALIS
Is Dick Cheney Headed For The Door?
Bush Leagues
By Staff and Wire Reports
Jul 9, 2004, 07:12
Although President Bush proclaims fierce loyalty to Dick Cheney as his running mate for a second term, questions stubbornly linger about whether the vice president will remain on the Republican ticket.
Cheney's approval ratings have plummeted amid persistent questions about his role in promoting the Iraq war and in handling the Sept. 11 terror attacks. He faces indictment from a French court on charges of bribery, money laundering and misuse of corporate funds while CEO of Halliburton and is also under investigation by the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission for his role in administering a $180 million slush fund that Halliburton used to pay bribes.
In addition, an analysis by the White House Counsel's Office concludes Cheney violated federal rules on conflict of interest by helping push through a $7 billion no-bid contract for Halliburton's work in Iraq.
Some prominent Republicans grumble - in private - about Cheney's behavior and his dominant role in administration decision-making. There also is unease in GOP circles about comparisons between the youthful, energetic John Edwards, the Democratic vice presidential candidate, and Cheney, a veteran of decades of political wars who seems uncomfortable on the campaign trail.
Former Sen. Alfonse D'Amato of New York, the only prominent Republican to speak publicly about replacing Cheney, said that "I believe the president can guarantee his essential re-election by looking to several other notable individuals who would add a great dimension to his ticket as a running mate." D'Amato suggested Secretary of State Colin Powell or Arizona Sen. John McCain.
McCain scoffs at the idea. "I think the day that President Bush drops Vice President Cheney will be a cold day in Gila Bend, Arizona," he said. "I see no scenario in which the president would replace Dick Cheney."
Bush gave a terse answer to the question about how Edwards would stack up against Cheney. "Dick Cheney can be president. Next?" Bush snapped. The White House insists that Bush is sticking with Cheney.
While no one in the GOP establishment suggests there's much chance that Bush would dump Cheney, there is still a lot of "what if" talk as the political conventions near.
What if, for instance, Cheney comes to believe that he's become a burden on the ticket and withdraws - perhaps citing health reasons. Few would question his motives under such circumstances.
Cheney, 63, has had four heart attacks since 1978, the most recent in November 2000 right after one of the closest, most stressful elections in U.S. history. A sophisticated pacemaker-defibrillator was placed in his chest in June 2001. The vice president had his annual heart checkup in May and was told there were no signs of irregularities or blockage in blood flow.
What if, the speculation goes, Bush decides - or is persuaded - that jettisoning Cheney is his only chance of being re-elected. Again, almost everyone close to the president suggests such an initiative would have to come from Cheney himself.
Cheney is championed by the party's conservative base, and anything seen as a move to displace him could anger the political right that Bush has worked so hard to court.
"One of Bush's strengths is that he sticks to his guns. He would appear both weak and political to dump Dick Cheney, and he's not going to do that," said Charles Black, a Republican adviser who is close to the White House. "It's not the way he operates. Plus, Cheney is very important to the president and to the government, regardless of politics."
But a Cheney departure still remains a wild card in the presidential sweepstakes, for health reasons or otherwise.
Political consultants and analysts generally agree that vice presidential candidates usually have little bearing on the outcome of an election, that the focus is almost entirely on the party standard bearer.
But Cheney isn't just any vice president.
He has been the gray eminence of the Bush presidency, the veteran political operative, serving almost as a virtual prime minister.
Jokes abounded early on about how Cheney, not Bush, was pulling the strings of power. According to Bob Woodward's new book, it is still Cheney's voice that Bush listens to most.
Bush only agreed to testify to the Sept. 11 commission this spring if Cheney could be by his side.
"I think that Cheney has almost been surgically grafted to the president," said Ross Baker, a political science professor at Rutgers University. "He enjoys the trust of the president, he is virtually a member of the Bush family, and I can imagine almost anybody being pushed overboard sooner than Cheney, starting with (Defense Secretary Donald) Rumsfeld."
"Cheney may jump, but he won't be pushed," Baker added.
Public attitudes have changed toward Cheney since he joined Bush's ticket in 2000 as a soft-spoken, avuncular presence.
An Associated Press-Ipsos poll from early June found that 51 percent of Americans want to keep Cheney on the ticket and 43 percent want Bush to pick someone else.
Perhaps more significantly, 28 percent of GOP voters surveyed - almost three in ten - thought Bush should pick someone other than Cheney as his running mate.
Generally, groups that most preferred to get rid of Cheney were women (46 percent), non-whites (51 percent), those who live in cities (48 percent), and Democrats and independents (both 53 percent), according to the Associated Press-Ipsos poll of 788 registered voters taken June 7-9.
The poll has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points. The error margin is slightly larger for subgroups.
http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artman/publish/printer_4806.shtml
BOREALIS
Is Dick Cheney Headed For The Door?
Bush Leagues
By Staff and Wire Reports
Jul 9, 2004, 07:12
Although President Bush proclaims fierce loyalty to Dick Cheney as his running mate for a second term, questions stubbornly linger about whether the vice president will remain on the Republican ticket.
Cheney's approval ratings have plummeted amid persistent questions about his role in promoting the Iraq war and in handling the Sept. 11 terror attacks. He faces indictment from a French court on charges of bribery, money laundering and misuse of corporate funds while CEO of Halliburton and is also under investigation by the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission for his role in administering a $180 million slush fund that Halliburton used to pay bribes.
In addition, an analysis by the White House Counsel's Office concludes Cheney violated federal rules on conflict of interest by helping push through a $7 billion no-bid contract for Halliburton's work in Iraq.
Some prominent Republicans grumble - in private - about Cheney's behavior and his dominant role in administration decision-making. There also is unease in GOP circles about comparisons between the youthful, energetic John Edwards, the Democratic vice presidential candidate, and Cheney, a veteran of decades of political wars who seems uncomfortable on the campaign trail.
Former Sen. Alfonse D'Amato of New York, the only prominent Republican to speak publicly about replacing Cheney, said that "I believe the president can guarantee his essential re-election by looking to several other notable individuals who would add a great dimension to his ticket as a running mate." D'Amato suggested Secretary of State Colin Powell or Arizona Sen. John McCain.
McCain scoffs at the idea. "I think the day that President Bush drops Vice President Cheney will be a cold day in Gila Bend, Arizona," he said. "I see no scenario in which the president would replace Dick Cheney."
Bush gave a terse answer to the question about how Edwards would stack up against Cheney. "Dick Cheney can be president. Next?" Bush snapped. The White House insists that Bush is sticking with Cheney.
While no one in the GOP establishment suggests there's much chance that Bush would dump Cheney, there is still a lot of "what if" talk as the political conventions near.
What if, for instance, Cheney comes to believe that he's become a burden on the ticket and withdraws - perhaps citing health reasons. Few would question his motives under such circumstances.
Cheney, 63, has had four heart attacks since 1978, the most recent in November 2000 right after one of the closest, most stressful elections in U.S. history. A sophisticated pacemaker-defibrillator was placed in his chest in June 2001. The vice president had his annual heart checkup in May and was told there were no signs of irregularities or blockage in blood flow.
What if, the speculation goes, Bush decides - or is persuaded - that jettisoning Cheney is his only chance of being re-elected. Again, almost everyone close to the president suggests such an initiative would have to come from Cheney himself.
Cheney is championed by the party's conservative base, and anything seen as a move to displace him could anger the political right that Bush has worked so hard to court.
"One of Bush's strengths is that he sticks to his guns. He would appear both weak and political to dump Dick Cheney, and he's not going to do that," said Charles Black, a Republican adviser who is close to the White House. "It's not the way he operates. Plus, Cheney is very important to the president and to the government, regardless of politics."
But a Cheney departure still remains a wild card in the presidential sweepstakes, for health reasons or otherwise.
Political consultants and analysts generally agree that vice presidential candidates usually have little bearing on the outcome of an election, that the focus is almost entirely on the party standard bearer.
But Cheney isn't just any vice president.
He has been the gray eminence of the Bush presidency, the veteran political operative, serving almost as a virtual prime minister.
Jokes abounded early on about how Cheney, not Bush, was pulling the strings of power. According to Bob Woodward's new book, it is still Cheney's voice that Bush listens to most.
Bush only agreed to testify to the Sept. 11 commission this spring if Cheney could be by his side.
"I think that Cheney has almost been surgically grafted to the president," said Ross Baker, a political science professor at Rutgers University. "He enjoys the trust of the president, he is virtually a member of the Bush family, and I can imagine almost anybody being pushed overboard sooner than Cheney, starting with (Defense Secretary Donald) Rumsfeld."
"Cheney may jump, but he won't be pushed," Baker added.
Public attitudes have changed toward Cheney since he joined Bush's ticket in 2000 as a soft-spoken, avuncular presence.
An Associated Press-Ipsos poll from early June found that 51 percent of Americans want to keep Cheney on the ticket and 43 percent want Bush to pick someone else.
Perhaps more significantly, 28 percent of GOP voters surveyed - almost three in ten - thought Bush should pick someone other than Cheney as his running mate.
Generally, groups that most preferred to get rid of Cheney were women (46 percent), non-whites (51 percent), those who live in cities (48 percent), and Democrats and independents (both 53 percent), according to the Associated Press-Ipsos poll of 788 registered voters taken June 7-9.
The poll has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points. The error margin is slightly larger for subgroups.
http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artman/publish/printer_4806.shtml
BOREALIS
Angry Bush Walks Out on Media
Refuses to Answer Questions About
Relationship With Ken Lay
2004 Capitol Hill Blue
By Staff and Wire Reports
Jul 9, 2004, 05:44
Bush Takes a Hike
AFP Photo/Paul J. Richards
A clearly-rattled President George W. Bush walked out of a media briefing Thursday, refusing to answer questions about his close relationship with indicted Enron executive Kenneth Lay, a campaign benefactor Bush nicknamed "Kenny Boy" when the two were up-and-comers in Texas.
The President, visibly upset, stomped off the stage when reporters pressed him about his relationship with Lay and left White House press secretary Scott McClellan to deal with the questions.
It has been "quite some time" since Bush and Lay talked with each other, McClellan said Thursday, brushing off questions about whether the two were friends.
"He was a supporter in the past and he's someone that I would also point out has certainly supported Democrats and Republicans in the past," McClellan said.
Lay clearly favored the GOP. He and his wife, Linda, donated $882,580 to federal candidates from 1989-2001, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. All but $86,470 went to Republicans.
McClellan declined to discuss the federal indictment charging Lay with a wide-ranging scheme to deceive the public, company shareholders and government regulators about the energy company that he founded and led to industry prominence before its collapse.
Instead, McClellan answered questions about Lay by talking about Bush's desire to curb corporate fraud.
"This president has worked to go after those wrongdoers and directed his administration to pursue those who are dishonest in the boardroom," McClellan said.
"The president has made it very clear that we will not tolerate dishonesty in the boardroom. This administration worked to uncover abuses and scandals in the corporate arena. And certainly the president's concern is with those workers and other people who have been harmed by corporate wrongdoing," McClellan said.
Democrat John Kerry's campaign had a different view, accusing the administration of dragging its feet on Enron. "It was three years too late," Kerry spokeswoman Stephanie Cutter said of the Lay indictment.
Lay's relationship with the Bush family dates from at least 1990 when he was co-chairman of former President Bush's economic summit for industrialized nations, which was held in Houston. Lay also was co-chairman of the host committee for the Republican National Convention when it was held in Houston in 1992.
The Center for Public Integrity, a Washington-based nonprofit group, said the Lays had given $139,500 to George W. Bush's political campaigns over the years.
Those donations were part of $602,000 that Enron employees gave to Bush's various campaigns, making Enron the leading political patron for Bush at the time of the company's bankruptcy in 2001.
In addition to Lay's political campaign donations, he and his wife contributed $100,000 to Bush's 2001 inauguration. Lay also was a fund-raiser for Bush, bringing in at least $100,000 for the president's 2002 campaign. That put Lay in "Pioneer" status as one of the president's top money-raisers.
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Angry Bush Walks Out on Media
Refuses to Answer Questions About
Relationship With Ken Lay
2004 Capitol Hill Blue
By Staff and Wire Reports
Jul 9, 2004, 05:44
Bush Takes a Hike
AFP Photo/Paul J. Richards
A clearly-rattled President George W. Bush walked out of a media briefing Thursday, refusing to answer questions about his close relationship with indicted Enron executive Kenneth Lay, a campaign benefactor Bush nicknamed "Kenny Boy" when the two were up-and-comers in Texas.
The President, visibly upset, stomped off the stage when reporters pressed him about his relationship with Lay and left White House press secretary Scott McClellan to deal with the questions.
It has been "quite some time" since Bush and Lay talked with each other, McClellan said Thursday, brushing off questions about whether the two were friends.
"He was a supporter in the past and he's someone that I would also point out has certainly supported Democrats and Republicans in the past," McClellan said.
Lay clearly favored the GOP. He and his wife, Linda, donated $882,580 to federal candidates from 1989-2001, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. All but $86,470 went to Republicans.
McClellan declined to discuss the federal indictment charging Lay with a wide-ranging scheme to deceive the public, company shareholders and government regulators about the energy company that he founded and led to industry prominence before its collapse.
Instead, McClellan answered questions about Lay by talking about Bush's desire to curb corporate fraud.
"This president has worked to go after those wrongdoers and directed his administration to pursue those who are dishonest in the boardroom," McClellan said.
"The president has made it very clear that we will not tolerate dishonesty in the boardroom. This administration worked to uncover abuses and scandals in the corporate arena. And certainly the president's concern is with those workers and other people who have been harmed by corporate wrongdoing," McClellan said.
Democrat John Kerry's campaign had a different view, accusing the administration of dragging its feet on Enron. "It was three years too late," Kerry spokeswoman Stephanie Cutter said of the Lay indictment.
Lay's relationship with the Bush family dates from at least 1990 when he was co-chairman of former President Bush's economic summit for industrialized nations, which was held in Houston. Lay also was co-chairman of the host committee for the Republican National Convention when it was held in Houston in 1992.
The Center for Public Integrity, a Washington-based nonprofit group, said the Lays had given $139,500 to George W. Bush's political campaigns over the years.
Those donations were part of $602,000 that Enron employees gave to Bush's various campaigns, making Enron the leading political patron for Bush at the time of the company's bankruptcy in 2001.
In addition to Lay's political campaign donations, he and his wife contributed $100,000 to Bush's 2001 inauguration. Lay also was a fund-raiser for Bush, bringing in at least $100,000 for the president's 2002 campaign. That put Lay in "Pioneer" status as one of the president's top money-raisers.
BOREALIS
real sickos...
>>The Schmitzes, who were investigated on similar accusations four years ago in the Green Bay, Wisconsin, area, moved to this town 85 miles northeast of Memphis in 2000. They were not charged in that case.
Whoever did the "investigating" then (and did nothing) probably should also have been investigated.
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Mass. Cleaning Woman Wins $294M Jackpot
By MARTIN FINUCANE,
Associated Press Writer
50 minutes ago
BRAINTREE, Mass. - Meet Geraldine Williams, a retired custodian and cleaning woman who will no longer have to mop her own floors or dust her own furniture.
Williams stepped forward Friday to claim the $294 million Mega Millions jackpot, the second-largest jackpot ever to go to a single person in North America.
Williams, who was introduced at a news conference at state lottery headquarters, said she'll take the payout in a lump sum of $117.6 million after taxes.
She said she was still stunned by her luck, a week after the numbers were drawn.
"I'm in disbelief," she said. "I can't believe it's me."
Williams, 67, recalled starring at a television as it showed the winning numbers, clutching her winning ticket and muttering, "Oh, God! Oh, God! Let it be! Let it be!"
Williams cleaned homes after retiring as a custodian at the University of Massachusetts-Lowell. She said she fully intended to keep an appointment to clean a client's home this week until she was told she had to meet with financial advisers in Boston.
Williams said she told her three children about her good fortune as soon as she knew, but added hiding it from everyone else had been difficult. She kept the winning ticket at a bank before turning it in.
"It's horrible," she said. "I don't like lying, I don't like sneaking around."
Williams said she plans to give the money to her children and some charities, and to travel
Williams, a grandmother of eight who moved to Lowell more than 40 years ago, said she plans to stay in the area.
A neighbor of Williams called her "a bundle of energy."
"She really will be able to enjoy this. I'm so happy for her. It's unbelievable, it's very surreal," said Paula Peacock, 39.
Peacock said Williams picks up trash in their neighborhood of two- and three-family homes. She added that Williams, "takes care of people that are elderly. If I know, Gerry, she'll still want to go and take care of them."
The $294 million is the highest Mega Millions prize in the game's history, exceeding a $239 million jackpot in February. Williams winning numbers were 10-25-38-39-50 with a Mega Ball 12.
The largest single ticket lottery jackpot winner ever in North America was Jack Whitaker of Scott Depot, W.Va., who won a Powerball jackpot of $314.9 million on Christmas Day 2002.
Other states participating in the Mega Millions game are Georgia, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Texas, Virginia and Washington.
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20040709/ap_on_re_us/lottery_winner
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QBID -- .0085 x .0086
BOREALIS
ICOA -- .023 x .024
not much vol. yet, but....
BOREALIS
Cheyey'd
BOREALIS
Philip Morris to Pay $1.25 Bln Settlement
July 9, 2004
BRUSSELS (Reuters) -
Philip Morris, a unit of Altria Group, is to pay $1.25 billion over 12 years to finance the fight against contraband cigarettes and settle legal disputes with the EU over smuggling charges, it said on Friday.
The European Union executive has waged a long-running lawsuit in U.S. courts and has accused the world's largest cigarette maker, along with rival R.J. Reynolds, of colluding in the smuggling of cigarettes to evade EU customs and taxes.
"This cooperation agreement represents a major step forward against the common enemy of counterfeit and contraband cigarettes," Andre Calantzopoulos, President and CEO of Philip Morris International, said in a statement.
The company said it had agreed to make funds available for efforts to fight contraband and counterfeit tobacco products. The outline of an accord between the EU and the maker of Marlboro, L&M and Chesterfield brands was first aired in April.
"The payments could, subject to several variable factors, total approximately $1.25 billion over 12 years, and would be payable over those years in varying amounts," it said.
As EU states raise taxes on cigarettes to deter smoking, smuggling and the production of fake cigarettes is estimated to cost hundreds of millions of euros (dollars) in lost revenues for governments.
The company said the agreement would end all prior disputes over contraband, including civil litigation brought by the European Commission and 10 EU states, against Philip Morris and a related case brought by Philip Morris against the Commission.
The 10 EU states are Italy, Germany, France, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Belgium, The Netherlands, Finland and Luxembourg.
http://www.boston.com/news/world/europe/articles/2004/07/09/philip_morris_to_pay_125_bln_settlement/
BOREALIS
Al Qaeda planning attack, Ridge says
By Charlie Savage, Globe Staff
July 9, 2004
Boston Globe
WASHINGTON -- The Bush administration warned again yesterday that Al Qaeda terrorists are "moving forward" with plans to attack the United States during the presidential campaign, but said authorities have no specific intelligence that this month's Democratic National Convention in Boston, or its Republican counterpart in New York, is a target.
"Credible reporting now indicates that Al Qaeda is moving forward with its plans to carry out a large-scale attack in the United States in an effort to disrupt our democratic process," Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge said. "We live in serious times, and this is sobering information about those who wish to do us harm."
Ridge did not raise the national terror risk alert and said authorities have no specific information about the time, place, and nature of any planned attack. But he said he would visit Boston and New York to review security preparations.
Asked at an afternoon news briefing about the timing of the announcement -- which interrupted coverage of Democratic presidential candidate John F. Kerry's selection of John Edwards as his running mate -- White House spokesman Scott McClellan denied a political motive.
"We have an obligation, regardless of the time of year or what year we are in, to protect the American people and keep them informed about what we are doing to provide for their safety and security," McClellan said. "This is an update to the American people. And it is also important to update them on the protective measures that we have put in place . . . in certain areas of the country where terrorists might want to strike."
A senior intelligence official, briefing reporters after Ridge spoke, was also asked what new threat information came in since the last public warning. The official described daily "nuggets" that add to a growing body of knowledge about Al Qaeda's intentions and capabilities.
Ridge also announced the opening of a Homeland Security Operations Center, described as a 24-hour national nerve center for information sharing and incident response, as well as new programs to track the movements of high-risk trucks on US highways, monitor the perimeters of high-risk chemical plants, and issue hand-held radiation detectors to police.
Such measures, Ridge said, will help ensure security for the major party political conventions, each of which will concentrate much of the country's political leadership in one place. The Democratic convention is set for Boston's Flee Center from July 26 to 29, while the Republicans will have theirs in New York City's Madison Square Garden from Aug. 30 to Sept. 2.
"We are working very closely with state and local officials in New York and Boston," Ridge said. "I will soon travel to those sites myself to review the security measures being implemented."
Ridge and other national security officials have repeatedly warned that Al Qaeda may try to repeat its success in the March 2004 train bombings in Madrid, credited with swinging Spain's vote toward a party that pledged to pull its troops out of Iraq.
On May 26, just before Memorial Day weekend and the dedication of the World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C., Attorney General John Ashcroft and FBI Director Robert Mueller held a similar news conference to warn about threats to the summer's national events. Ridge had issued a similar call for vigilance on April 19.
Yesterday, Ridge cited recent arrests of suspected Al Qaeda members in England, Jordan, and Italy as evidence that the group is active. He also said Homeland Security is focusing on the Boston and New York subway systems because terrorists have attacked rail lines in Madrid, Moscow, and Tokyo in recent years.
Both Boston's FleetCenter and New York's Madison Square Garden are adjacent to train stations.
"Clearly, given the particular venues that have been selected and the proximity to railroad and mass transit, that is of a concern, but we feel we can adequately address it," Ridge said. "One of the reasons we've been able to draw that conclusion is because of the extraordinary cooperation with state and local law enforcement."
The senior intelligence official told reporters that because Al Qaeda has had success overseas using truck bombs, the government suspects the group may try to use them on American bridges and tunnels. The network also remains interested in targeting planes, possibly for hijackings, as it did in the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, he said.
The US Secret Service is heading security for both conventions. Several transit security measures are on its list in Boston, including the closure of North Station and Interstate 93.
In Boston, Massachusetts Secretary of Public Safety Edward Flynn said officials have planned for the convention for the past 18 months, spending "thousands of hours and millions of dollars" on a security plan that will deploy thousands of police officers.
Mayor Thomas M. Menino stressed there is no specific intelligence "that pertains to the greater Boston area at all." And Boston Police Commissioner Kathleen O'Toole said federal and local officials are prepared for "every possible scenario" to ensure that the convention is safe.
"I think it's important that we do not overreact to reports," she said. "We have to be vigilant. We have to be concerned, of course. But I know we're very well prepared for this event."
In New York, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly also told reporters that the terror warning would not change security operations because the city already was on high alert.
In a statement, the Kerry campaign accused the Bush administration of failing to do enough to protect against another attack.
"Our crucial intelligence and military resources are overstretched abroad and our homeland security effort at home is underfunded and poorly managed," it said. "We need a serious effort and serious programs to protect our ports and trains, our chemical and nuclear plants, and other critical infrastructure resources."
Congressman Edward Markey, Democrat of Malden, said the threat information should persuade Congress to grant a bipartisan request by the New York and Massachusetts delegations for $50 million in federal security funding for the conventions. "A successful attack at either convention would be a devastating blow to the political process and to our country's collective psyche," he said.
Globe correspondent Heather Allen and Globe staff writers Glen Johnson and Shelley Murphy contributed to this report from Boston.
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2004/07/09/al_qaeda_planning_attack_ridge_says...
BOREALIS
Marine missing for 18 days to be evaluated
July 9, 2004
AP
BERLIN -- A U.S. Marine who turned up in Beirut 18 days after he went missing from his base in Iraq was to be flown to Germany Friday for examination in a U.S. military hospital, authorities said.
Cpl. Wassef Ali Hassoun had been reported missing from his base near the troubled city of Fallujah. He arranged with American officials to pick him up Thursday afternoon in Beirut and bring him to the U.S. Embassy, according to U.S. officials.
There was speculation he might have deserted his base and headed to Lebanon when he was abducted. The Navy was investigating whether the entire kidnapping might have been part of a hoax.
He was expected to be brought to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in the evening and stay for several days, said hospital spokeswoman Marie Shaw.
"He's going to undergo debriefing and evaluation," she said.
While the 24-year-old was missing various conflicting reports emerged about Hassoun -- first that he was beheaded, then that he was alive.
Arab television on June 27 showed a videotape of him with his eyes covered by a white blindfold and a sword hanging over his head.
http://www.boston.com/news/world/europe/articles/2004/07/09/marine_missing_for_18_days_to_be_evaluat....
BOREALIS
Bush issues full pardons in two fraud cases
------- BUSINESS AS USUAL --------
Pardons issued for two men in Oklahoma, Wisconsin
The Associated Press
Updated: 5:33 p.m. ET July 07, 2004
WASHINGTON - President Bush has issued full pardons to two men convicted in separate fraud cases in Wisconsin and Oklahoma.
The pardons announced Wednesday marked the 18th and 19th of Bush’s presidency, according to the Justice Department. Bush has also commuted the prison sentences of two individuals since taking office on Jan. 20, 2001.
Those newly pardoned are:
Anthony John Curreri of West Bend, Wis. Sentenced to three years’ probation for mail fraud in March 1976.
Craven Wilford McLemore of Gracemont, Okla. Served six months in prison and 18 months probation and fined $10,000 in February 1983 for fraud conspiracy conviction.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5388260/
Borealis
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