Free Republic 1st Qtr 2026 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $12,062
14%  
Woo hoo!! And now only $88 to reach 15%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Latest Articles

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Yeltsin insists on Russian 'sector'

    06/17/1999 7:25:19 AM PDT · by machman
    MSNBC | 6/17/99
    MOSCOW, June 17 —  Russia and the United States on Thursday reported progress on resolving “most” issues about Moscow’s peacekeeping role in Kosovo, but both sides acknowledged being hung up over the biggest issue of all: whether Russia gets its own sector to patrol, or an “area of responsibility” within a NATO sector. ;MOST OF THE issues have been resolved peacefully,” Russia President Boris Yeltsin said in comments broadcast on television. “But one question, which I would undoubtedly call the principal one, is sectors. In other words, they don’t want to give Russia a sector.”        Yeltsin said ...
  • Will Al Gore Choose The Unibomber As Running Mate

    06/17/1999 7:18:50 AM PDT · by GMLOGMD
    I find the similarities between Al Gore and the Unibomber less than comforting. Check Out This Link For Similarities Between Al Gore and The Unibomber.
  • Do We KILL her? Carjackers debated as victim held dog

    06/17/1999 7:15:29 AM PDT · by GailA · 622+ views
    The Commercial Appeal | 6/17/99 | Bill Dries, Tom Bailey, Jr. & John Semien
  • Alleged Former SLA Member Snatched By FBI From 'Normal' Life

    06/17/1999 7:14:04 AM PDT · by PrinceOfCups · 109+ views
    FOX news | June 17, 1999 | By John Nemo AP
    ST. PAUL, Minn. — In more than a decade of community theater work, the reviewers were almost always kind to Sara Jane Olson. One singled her out as the strongest performer in a 1990 production of King Lear. Another praised her "vibrant" 1993 performance in All's Well That Ends Well. The critics had no idea what an actress she was. If the FBI is right, Sara Jane Olson — a 52-year-old mother of three who lived with her doctor husband in an ivy-covered home in an upscale neighborhood — is really Kathleen Ann Soliah, a member of the Symbionese Liberation ...
  • U. S. Offered Loans and Export Credits Quietly to Beijing

    06/17/1999 7:10:38 AM PDT · by cloud8 · 113+ views
    Wall St. Journal | 6/17/99 | Helene Cooper
    U. S. Offered Loans and Export Credits Quietly to Beijing by Helene Cooper Washington - The Clinton administration, trying to boost U.S. exports to China, quietly offered to provide Beijing with $5 billion in export credits and loans to finance the purchase of U. S. environmental, health and safety products. But the offer, made by U.S. Export-Import Bank Chairman James Harmon during talks two months ago with Chen Yuan, head of the China Development Bank, is among a number of issues put on ice when the U.S. mistakenly bombed the Chinese Embassy in Yugoslavia. Vice President Al Gore also discussed ...
  • Justice-bashing unwarranted

    06/17/1999 7:03:02 AM PDT · by Willie Green
    The Detroit News | June 17, 1999 | Thomas E. Brennan
    For education and discussion only. Not for commercial use. "In the judicial branch of government, more than any other, public perception matters and public confidence is vital.” In so saying, the Detroit Free Press in a May 16 editorial launched into a reckless and unwarranted diatribe designed precisely to poison the public’s perception of the Michigan Supreme Court and undermine public confidence in its decisions. That the editorial was part of a concert of advocacy journalism was apparent. It followed, by two days, an article by Free Press columnist Brian Dickerson in which he advanced his personal opinion that ...
  • 'The anomalies of the International Criminal Tribunal are legion'

    06/17/1999 6:59:39 AM PDT · by DSH · 1+ views
    The London Times | June 17, 1999 | John Laughland
    The (London) Times, June 17, 1999 John Laughland 'The anomalies of the International Criminal Tribunal are legion. This is not victors' justice in the former Yugoslavia - in fact, it is no justice at all' Emotion may be a spur to justice, but it is rarely its guarantor. The allegations of war crimes eagerly funnelled out of Kosovo by the thousands of journalists in the province have provoked a demand for retribution. That cry for justice is natural. But the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, the body charged with pursuing those accused of war crimes in Kosovo, is ...
  • "A CONSTITUTION FOR ISRAEL: PRELIMINARY DRAFT"*

    06/17/1999 6:58:20 AM PDT · by HMaverik · 194+ views
    Prof. Paul Eidelberg
  • US envoy faces fury in Beijing at talks on embassy bombing

    06/17/1999 6:55:35 AM PDT · by Not gonna take it anymore
    Electronic Telegraph | Thursday 17 June 1999 | By David Rennie in Beijing
    ISSUE 1483 Thursday 17 June 1999 US envoy faces fury in Beijing at talks on embassy bombing By David Rennie in Beijing AMERICA sent a senior envoy, Thomas Pickering, to Beijing yesterday to deliver Washington's formal explanation of the bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade. The stone-throwing and angry questioning of tourists may be long past, but for many British and American expatriates in Beijing they have been replaced by lingering sourness, the withering of painstakingly nurtured friendships and a sense of gloom. "You like to be America's dog. Be careful of your dog life when you walk on ...
  • California librarians weed out ouytdated and offensive books

    06/17/1999 6:52:34 AM PDT · by UrbanConservative
    CNN | 16 June 99 | CNN staff & Correspondent Siobhan Darrow
    Not for commercial use. Posted for the purpose of discussion only California librarians weed out outdated and offensive books June 16, 1999 Web posted at: 7:59 p.m. EDT (2359 GMT) LOS ANGELES (CNN) -- The state of California has allocated nearly $159 million to the public school system in an effort to replace books filled with ethnic and gender stereotypes or outdated information. One such book on the shelves of a Los Angeles school library, entitled "Asbestos," describes the cancer-causing building material as "our friend." "At the time in 1941 when this book was published, we didn't know the harmful ...
  • 20,000 teachers on the march give State House a message

    06/17/1999 6:50:36 AM PDT · by Cincinatus
    Boston Globe | June 17, 1999 | Doreen Iudica Vigue and Beth Daley with Sara Neufeld
    Fed up with what they call a year of ''teacher bashing,'' about 20,000 teachers marched up Beacon Street to the State House during rush hour yesterday, ringing thousands of silver handbells in one of the largest showings ever of unity by state educators. Teachers from Gardner to Gloucester, Medway to Manchester-by-the Sea all marched to the chant: Ask us. Listen to us. The event - drawing almost double the expected number of teachers and causing downtown traffic gridlock for three hours - followed a tough year for Massachusetts teachers. The year began with the spotlight on prospective teachers who ...
  • A National Calamity

    06/17/1999 6:49:31 AM PDT · by borkrules
    FrontPage Magazine | June 17, 1999 | Michael Kelly
    SO NOW WE ARE FOUR, as along comes Jack, eight pounds, four ounces, to join Tom, who for the record welcomes this development; and now I know what my job will be for the remainder of my days. I will be the man sitting behind the driver's wheel saying: Boys, listen to your mother. This is a good job, and one of the better things about it is the nice clarity it lends to life. Fathers (and mothers) relearn that the world is a simple enough place. They discover that their essential ambitions, which once seemed so many, have been ...
  • Less sociology, more psychiatry in youth violence debate

    06/17/1999 6:45:55 AM PDT · by Willie Green · 82+ views
    The Detroit Free Press | June 17, 1999 | DR. JOEL YOUNG
    For education and discussion only. Not for commercial use. FEW RECENT STORIES have riveted the nation more than the fatal shootings at Columbine High School in Colorado and the near-tragedy at Heritage High School in suburban Atlanta, where six students were shot by a fellow student. We've been struggling not only to understand these types of actions, but also to protect ourselves from a recurrence. We know the facts but find little comfort in our knowledge. The two teenage gunmen in Colorado and the 15-year-old gunman in Georgia had backgrounds that gave little hint of their capacity for terror. ...
  • Economic Growth and Econmic Policy: Why Do Countries Differ So Sharply in their Economic Growth?

    06/17/1999 6:40:03 AM PDT · by MisterC · 4+ views
    The Heritage Foundation | 06/17/99 | Robert Barro
    YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO A LECTURE ON ECONOMIC GROWTH AND ECONOMIC POLICY: WHY DO COUNTRIES DIFFER SO SHARPLY IN THEIR ECONOMIC GROWTH? FEATURING ROBERT BARRO Robert C. Waggoner Professor of Economics, Harvard University Robert J. Barro is one of the most distinguished economic theorists of his generation. Professor Barro is a leading expert on the factors determining why countries differ so sharply in their economic growth rates. In his work, Barro cites the importance of private property rights, political freedom and the importance of low inflation. Barro is the Robert C. Waggoner Professor of Economics at Harvard University, a ...
  • Hepatitis A outbreak among gay men in Tampa

    06/17/1999 6:38:55 AM PDT · by Rodney King
    The Gay Advocate | 6/17 | Chip
    Thursday, June 17, 1999 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Hepatitis A outbreak among gay men in Tampa Health officials in the Tampa, Fla., area are urging gay men to be vaccinated against hepatitis A after an outbreak of the disease in the gay community. The Tampa Tribune reports that more than half of the cases of the disease logged this year were among men who had sex with other men. The paper reports that hepatitis A infections are also increasing among gay men in other cities, including New York, Denver, Seattle, and Atlanta. "It's not exactly known why there's an increased risk," the paper quotes Suzanne ...
  • House considers Ten Commandments, rejects movie curbs

    06/17/1999 6:34:24 AM PDT · by gone
    AP | WIRE:June 17, 8:46 a.m. ET
    WASHINGTON (AP) _ Churning through a debate on the causes of youth violence, the House is considering a measure that would permit the Ten Commandments to be posted in schools and other government buildings. The debate follows the sharp defeat of a proposal that would have curbed access by children to explicit sexual or violent material in video games and movies. Propelled by aggressive lobbying by the entertainment industry, the House rejected the measure Wednesday on a 282-146 vote. ``Of course we worked it hard,'' Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, told reporters in a conference ...
  • Left-Right Bedfellows

    06/17/1999 6:31:48 AM PDT · by Kenyon · 2+ views
    Nation | June, 1999 | Bernard Schwarz
    June 28, 1999 Left-Right Bedfellows "We are the evil empire. Our war in Kosovo is the latest chapter in a century of American imperialism that includes Vietnam, the Gulf War and our shameful, secret wars in Central America." No, these aren't Tom Hayden's words, nor do they come from any of the other progressives who've opposed the US war in the Balkans. They belong to Thomas Fleming, editor of the conservative--no, paleoconservative--magazine Chronicles. Noting that the anti-interventionists in the Kosovo debate span the left and right, the New York Times recently opined that the war against Yugoslavia has made strange ...
  • Clinton Planning Encore to Kosovo

    06/17/1999 6:29:43 AM PDT · by CHIEF negotiator · 67+ views
    BNN-Bogus News Network | 6-17-99 | BNN Staff
  • Not my war

    06/17/1999 6:26:43 AM PDT · by Jean S
    WorldNetDaily | June 17, 1999 | Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
    The aftermath of the war on Yugoslavia is not following the typical pattern. Usually, the commander in chief basks in the glow of victory. Medals are handed out, parades organized, speeches given to the masses. Veterans are heralded as preservers of freedom. The national soul swells in patriotic fervor. The merchants of death gain a new lease on life. Not this time. This is no victory glow, no parades, no flag waving. Outside the mainstream media, there is a curious lack of any bragging at all. There are no yellow ribbons adorning trees. Indeed, veterans of this war are ...
  • Bradley Woos California's Democrats

    06/17/1999 6:26:34 AM PDT · by madprof98 · 2+ views
    San Francisco Examiner | June 16, 1999 | Zachary Coile
    While Vice President Al Gore gets ready to tell the world Wednesday from his family farm in Tennessee that he's running for president, his chief Democratic rival was in California just hoping to get noticed. Bill Bradley, the former New Jersey senator and New York Knicks basketball star, was in San Francisco on Tuesday talking to two groups that traditionally have been Democratic stalwarts - environmentalists and abortion-rights advocates. Bradley, who campaigns in Los Angeles on Wednesday, is using his 10-day trip through California to draw attention to his uphill bid for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination. Gore holds ...