http://michellemalkin.com/archives/001168.htm
"PRETTY, PRETTY PLEASE"
By Michelle Malkin · January 06, 2005 05:48 PM
Note: The following text is an exact quote:
===
===
http://www.dhs.gov/dhspublic/interapp/press_release/press_release_0580.xml
Press Releases
Homeland Security Citizen Corps Forms Partnerships with the American Legion and American Legion Auxiliary
Sandi Dutton, American Legion Auxiliary, Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge and Thomas P. Cadmus, American Legion, at the signing ceremony. (Photo B. Bahler)
For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
Contact: 202-282-8010
January 4, 2005
Secretary Tom Ridge today announced a new affiliation between Citizen Corps and The American Legion and the American Legion Auxiliary to help raise public awareness about the importance of emergency preparedness and volunteer service. Along with Secretary Ridge, Thomas P. Cadmus, National Commander of The American Legion, and Sandi Dutton, National President of the American Legion Auxiliary, were present to sign the respective agreements.
The American Legion and the Legions Auxiliary devote countless hours to serving their country and their communities, said Ridge. With the help of these two organizations, the Department of Homeland Securitys Citizen Corps will expand its efforts to educate, train and prepare all Americans.
Through these partnerships, American Legion Posts and American Legion Auxiliary Units across the nation will assist in developing local Citizen Corps Councils to involve citizens in preparedness efforts. This affiliation will also focus on engaging Americas youth in hometown security, elevating Flag Day as a day of citizenship and emergency preparedness, and providing support to Veterans Affairs Hospitals in emergency preparedness efforts.
At their 2004 National Convention, The American Legion passed a resolution to become an affiliate of Citizen Corps. National Commander Cadmus pledged the continuing commitment of his organization stating, Supporting the Departments efforts to engage citizens in hometown security is a natural fit for The American Legion. Our members have all seen active military duty defending our country and strongly believe in the mission to be prepared on the home front too. Echoing this sentiment, Sandi Dutton, National President of the American Legion Auxiliary, also expressed her support. The women of the Auxiliary are committed to improving the welfare of the community by helping all citizens be prepared for any emergency.
Citizen Corps is the Department of Homeland Securitys nationwide grass-roots effort that actively involves Americans in making communities safer, stronger and better prepared for all emergencies. The American Legion serves as an advocate for American veterans, a friend of the U.S. military, a sponsor of community-based programs for young people, and a spokesman for patriotic values. With 2.7 million members and nearly 15,000 posts worldwide, the American Legion is the nations largest veterans group. The American Legion Auxiliary is the largest patriotic womens service organization in the world, with nearly 1 million members. The organization sponsors volunteer programs on the national and local levels, focusing on three major areas: veterans, young people and the community.
For more information about Citizen Corps, visit www.citizencorps.gov. To learn more about the American Legion, please visit www.legion.org. For more information about the American Legion Auxiliary, visit www.legion-aux.org.
http://www.internet-haganah.us/harchives/003423.html
January 06, 2005
"Understanding and detecting TATP and related explosives"
Progress reported from Technion.
Judy Siegel-Itzkovich, THE JERUSALEM POST Jan. 6, 2005:
ARTICLE SNIPPET: "Researchers at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology have developed a unique device that identifies improvised explosives - the kind commonly used by terrorist organizations. The device, called Peroxide Explosive Tester (PET) and resembling a three-color roller pen, releases three chemical mixtures that change color upon interaction with the suspected material.
Prof. Ehud Keinan, dean of the Technion's chemistry faculty who invented the PET, disclosed new findings relating to the explosive called triacetone-triperoxide (TATP) at the annual symposium of the Technion Center for Security Science and Technology: "To our great surprise, we discovered that TATP is very different from all other conventional explosives in that it does not release heat during the explosion. It explodes by rapid decomposition of every solid-state molecule to four gas-phase molecules. This rare phenomenon, scientifically known as 'entropic explosion', is reminiscent of the rapid reaction that produces gas in the safety air-bags of cars during accidents."
These results, which were published Thursday in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, arise from collaborative research that was carried out by Keinan along with Prof. Yehuda Zeiri of the Nuclear Research Center in the Negev, Profs, Ronnie Kosloff and Joseph Almog of the Hebrew University and their coworkers. During the conference, Keinan was awarded first prize in a competition for the development of counterterror technologies."
When prisoner's rights supercede law enforcement rights, something is horrifically wrong. The ACLU has a large handprint in this travesty.