Tag Archives: Dallas

10 things you need to know today: November 24, 2012

Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi claimed sweeping new powers on Friday.

Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi claimed sweeping new powers on Friday. Photo: Mark Wilson/Getty Images

This daily feature from The Week is quite informative.  Even on a slow news day…

Egypt’s Mohamed Morsi is slammed for his power grab, U.S. stocks soar on Black Friday, and more in our roundup of the stories that are making news and driving opinion

1. EGYPTIAN JUDGES CONDEMN MORSI’S POWER GRAB
Top judges in Egypt have slammed President Mohamed Morsi for claiming sweeping new powers on Friday. Morsi’s decree gives the president near-absolute powers, and immunity from court appeals. The country’s senior judges, most of whom were appointed by ousted leader Hosni Mubarak, called Morsi’s power grab an “unprecedented assault” on the nation’s independent judiciary. Tens of thousands of Egyptians also took to the streets to protest Morsi’s decree. [The Guardian]

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2. ISRAEL EASES GAZA BORDER RESTRICTIONS
As part of Israel’s truce with the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, restrictions are being eased along the tense border, allowing Palestinian farmers to access land near the border’s security fence, and letting Palestinian fisherman head further out to sea. The Egypt-brokered truce, which took effect Wednesday, ended an eight-day conflict that reportedly killed 166 Palestinians and six Israelis. [Associated Press]

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3. STOCKS SOAR ON BLACK FRIDAY
As millions of Americans braved long Black Friday lines to score steep discounts on a huge variety of consumer goods, investors showed their own “Black Friday cheer.” The Nasdaq and Dow Jones Industrial Average each rose 1.4 percent, and the S&P 500 climbed 1.3 percent, giving the latter index its biggest weekly gain since December 2011. Black Friday wasn’t the only reason for the rally, but it certainly helped. Consumer spending makes up some 70 percent of America’s economic activity, and the holiday shopping season accounts for 40 percent of many retailers’ annual revenue. [Associated Press]

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4. MASSACHUSETTS STRIP CLUB EXPLODES, INJURING 18
A natural gas explosion in Springfield, Mass., on Friday destroyed a strip club, damaged a daycare center, and blew out every window in a three-block radius. At least 18 people were injured. “This is a miracle… that no one was killed,” said the state’s lieutenant governor. [The Guardian]

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5. DALLAS‘ LARRY HAGMAN DIES AT 81
Larry Hagman, who played J.R. Ewing on Dallas, died Friday at 81 due to complications from his battle with cancer. On Dallas, Hagman turned “a business cheat, faithless husband, and bottomless well of corruption” into a “charmingly loathsome oil baron,” and is perhaps best remembered for the cliffhanger “Who shot J.R.?” episode. [Associated Press]

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6. BOXER HECTOR CAMACHO DIES AT 50
Hector “Macho” Camacho, the 50-year-old Puerto Rican boxer known for his “lightning-quick hands and flamboyant personality,” died on Saturday in Puerto Rico, after being shot earlier in the week while sitting in a parked car.  Ten bags of cocaine were reportedly found in the car. “As a teenager, Camacho was a brawler, a serial shoplifter, an admitted drug user, and a car thief, and he never put that part of his nature behind him.” [New York Times]

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7. WALMART WORKERS PROTEST ON BLACK FRIDAY
Black Friday wasn’t without its drama. Walmart workers demanding higher wages and better benefits staged protests at dozens of stores across the country on the annual day-after-Thanksgiving sale. Demonstrations were reported in Colorado, North Carolina, Texas, Minnesota, Florida, Kentucky, and several other states. [CBS News]

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8. NHL CANCELS ALL-STAR GAME
The hockey hiatus continues. On Friday, the lockout-stricken NHL canceled its annual All-Star game and two more weeks of games as owners and players were unable to strike a collective bargaining agreement. The NHL has now canceled the first nine weeks of games, through Dec. 14. The All-Star game, which was to have taken place in Columbus, Ohio, would have brought $12 million to the area, according to the Columbus Dispatch. [USA Today]

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9. THIEVES STEAL 18 TONS OF CHOCOLATE
Someone’s sweet tooth will be satisfied. Austrian police are on the hunt for thieves who stole a whopping 18 tons of chocolate bars. According to local media outlets, a driver loaded his truck with 33 pallets of milk chocolate in Bludenz, claiming that he was supposed to deliver the shipment to the Czech Republic. But authorities said the license plates and paperwork of the truck and driver turned out to be fake. [Associated Press]

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10. TOM CRUISE REUNITES WITH SURI
Tom Cruise and daughter Suri have reunited. After more than three months apart, the Mission Impossible scientologist and his little girl reunited for Thanksgiving in London. Cruise has seen little of his 6-year-old child since he and Katie Holmes filed for divorce in the summer. Holmes, meanwhile, spent Thanksgiving in her hometown of Toledo, Ohio. [People]

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Dallas Pastor Frederick Haynes III Defends Obama’s Declaration For Marriage Equality

Frederick Haynes

Lawrence O’Donnell showed this video on his show last.  O’Donnell was contrasting Terry Jones, who hung the President’s image in effigy to Pastor Frederick Haynes who simply wanted to educate his congregation.

I was absolutely floored by this man’s passion on the subject of marriage equality and how members of the Church slowly came around to understanding what Dr. Haynes was saying.

In the end they gave him thunderous applause as a sign of approval

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10 things you need to know today: April 4, 2012

The Week online magazine’s daily briefing…

The Week

Romney wins three more primaries, tornadoes hit Dallas, and more in our roundup of the stories that are making news and driving opinion

POSTED ON APRIL 4, 2012, AT 8:30 AM
April Bridges pauses while digging through the remains of a home destroyed by one of several tornadoes that ripped through north Texas Tuesday.

April Bridges pauses while digging through the remains of a home destroyed by one of several tornadoes that ripped through north Texas Tuesday. Photo: Tom Pennington/Getty Images

1. ROMNEY SWEEPS THREE STATES
Mitt Romney made a big step toward wrapping up the Republican presidential nomination on Tuesday, sweeping primaries in Wisconsin, Maryland, and Washington, D.C., and winning the majority of the 100 delegates at stake in the three contests. In another sign that Romney is the one, President Obama singled him out in a major speech on Rep. Paul D. Ryan’s (R-Wis.) budget proposal, noting Romney’s support for what he called “social Darwinism” and a “prescription for decline.” Meanwhile, Rick Santorum is focusing on reviving his campaign in his home state of Pennsylvania, which holds its primary on April 24. [New York Times]
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2. TORNADOES TERRORIZE DALLAS
Between six and 13 tornadoes are thought to have touched down in north Texas on Tuesday, destroying at least 150 homes, sucking tractor-trailers into the air, and wreaking havoc on hundreds of flights at the Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport. As of early Wednesday, there were no reports of any deaths associated with the twisters. [CNN]
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3. TEN DEAD IN AFGHANISTAN SUICIDE BOMBING
At least ten people were killed Wednesday in northern Afghanistan in an attack by a suicide bomber riding a motorcycle. Dozens more were injured. Details are still emerging, but NATO says three service members were among the dead. [Associated Press]
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4. FED’S COMMENTS TO DRAG DOWN STOCKS
Stocks are expected to open lower Wednesday following the release of details from the Federal Reserve’s last policy meeting. The minutes from the meeting suggest the Fed is unlikely to offer any new economic stimulus. Some investors had hoped for another round of quantitative easing. [CNN]
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5. TOP SPORTS OFFICIALS KILLED IN SOMALI SUICIDE BOMBING
Early Wednesday, a suicide bomber killed at least 10 people in Mogadishu at a ceremony at the national theater. The president of Somalia’s soccer federation and the president of the country’s Olympic committee were among the dead. [Associated Press]
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6. DETAILS EMERGE ABOUT OAKLAND SHOOTING SUSPECT
Police have begun releasing details about One L. Goh, the 43-year-old South Korean national accused of shooting and killing seven people at a small Christian college in northern California this week. Police say Goh had recently been expelled from the college “for behavioral problems” and “anger management,” and felt ostracized for his broken English. [Los Angeles Times]
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7. FRENCH ARREST 10 SUSPECTED TERRORISTS
On Wednesday, French police arrested 10 people with suspected links to radical Islamist websites. It’s the latest in the terrorism crackdown across the France following a series of recent attacks. [Associated Press]
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8. DOCTORS TO RECOMMEND FEWER TESTS
A coalition of nine medical specialty boards is expected to recommend Wednesday that dozens of common tests and procedures be performed less frequently. The recommendations are seen as an acknowledgement that many expensive tests are performed unnecessarily, potentially harming patients and vastly inflating the cost of health care. [New York Times]
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9. BAYLOR WINS WOMEN’S CHAMPIONSHIP
Baylor beat Notre Dame 80-61 on Tuesday night to win the NCAA women’s basketball championship. The victory topped off a historic 40-0 season for the Lady Bears. They’re the first women’s team in NCAA history to win 40 games and the seventh to go undefeated. [Associated Press]
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10. INSTAGRAM FINALLY AVAILABLE FOR ANDROID
The wildly popular photo-tinting and sharing app is now available for Android. It was previously exclusive to Apple gadgets. Since launching in 2010, Instagram has racked up more than 30 million users and more than one billion photo uploads. [CNET]

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Front pages largely ignore today’s anniversary of JFK assassination and

The thing about the JKF assassination is that no matter how many decades pass, those of us who experienced the shock and dismay on November 22, 1963 that President Kennedy had been shot and killed in Dallas,  still have vivid memories of what we were doing that day.  

We remember the wall to wall television coverage; shops closing  their doors; people buying newspapers as fast as they were printed to get the latest on the Jackie, Caroline and “John John“, the President’s wife and children and to find out how and why this tragic event happened.

Never had there been such a bludgeoning shock to the nation.  We watched the coverage of the President’s body being loaded onto Air Force One.  We saw Lee Harvey Oswald, the alleged “lone” gunman get arrested.  Shocking live television coverage of Oswald being shot by night club owner Jack Ruby.  The continuing drama, innuendos, speculation and unscripted telecasts culminated after four days of non-stop coverage with the funeral.

Today, the tragic event has been largely ignored.

Those of us who were witnesses to a sad and tragic moment in our country’s history remember President John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the 35th President of the United States of America.  Gunned down on November 22, 1963.  He was 46 years old.

CNN has a comprehensive and interactive section on JFK and his assassination here.

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Dubya’s Presidential Center

Mario Piperni

News item:

Surrounded by veterans of his administration, former President George W. Bush broke ground on his presidential center on Tuesday and promised to continue to advance the “principles that guided our service in public office.”

“We believe that America’s interest and conscience demand engagement in the world, because what happens elsewhere inevitably affects us here,” Bush said at a ceremony at the future site of the George W. Bush Presidential Center, a library, museum and think tank to be built on the campus of Southern Methodist University in Dallas.

I imagine that if the words George W. Bush, library and think tank can all be linked in some meaningful way, then any three words one can possibly think up can equally be placed side by side regardless of how little relevance the first might have with the next two (baboon/Mayo Clinic/rocket science quickly comes to mind.)

The only ‘presidential center’ I can think of which would be a fitting tribute to the incredible ignorance of George W. Bush would be the freak show at a traveling carnival showcasing Louise-The Bearded Lady and Barney-The Dog Faced Boy.

Letterman is more on the mark with his Top Ten Highlights of the George W. Bush Library Groundbreaking.

10. While digging, they found Obama’s birth certificate
9. Read warm congratulatory note from Osama and Julie bin Laden
8. Displayed thousands of books Bush pretends to read
7. George arrived wearing a flight suit and piloting the Conan blimp
6. Dubya only had three shoes thrown at him
5. Dug up thousands of Gore ballots from 2000
4. Bush gave Halliburton $300 million check just for the hell of it
3. George correctly pronounced the word “nuclear” (it doesn’t get any more groundbreaking than that)
2. After a few seconds of digging, Bush raised “Mission Accomplished” banner
1. Bush and Cheney celebrated the day with a long, passionate, open-mouth kiss

The last item preferably while sharing a cell at a Federal Correctional complex.

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