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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2003 07:53:05 -0700
From: Media Research Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: MRC Alert: Couric Tags Arnold as Nazi's Son,
     Then Condemns 'Dirty' Tactics

              ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
     10:50am EDT, Monday August 11, 2003 (Vol. Eight; No. 152)
  The 1,558th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

> Couric Tags Arnold as Nazi's Son, Then Condemns "Dirty" Tactics
> Lauer Worries About "Collusion...All the Way to the White House"
> Koppel Pleads with the "Sensible" Panetta to Get Into Race
> NBC News Reporter Pushes Schwarzenegger to the Left
> NBC: Like Reagan, Schwarzenegger Pretends to Not Hear Questions
> Newsweek: Dean "Centrist" While Schwarzenegger "Conservative"
> Dean Gave VT High Taxes, Yet Media Tag Him "Fiscal Conservative"
> NBC Backtracks on Blaming Global Warming for Heat Wave
> FNC Picks Up on PBS Affiliate's NIMBY Efforts to Avoid Laborers
> "Top Ten Things Overheard During George W. Bush's Vacation"

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1) Katie Couric certainly has chutzpah. On Thursday's Today,
beating Democratic operatives to the punch, Couric reminded
viewers of Arnold Schwarzenegger's "baggage," from "smoking
marijuana" to being "the son of a Nazi Party member" to
"allegations" that he's "sexually harassed women and committed
infidelity." But on Monday morning, she dared to scold Republican
gubernatorial candidate Bill Simon as she cited a newspaper report
about how a Simon strategist promised to spotlight "the actor's
raunchy past and liberal social views." Couric then demanded:
"How dirty will you get?"

2) Matt Lauer on Friday morning tried to undermine the recall
effort by worrying about whether there's "collusion in the
Republican Party that goes all the way to the White House?" As if
something would be wrong with that. Over on ABC's Good Morning
America, Diane Sawyer reminded Arnold Schwarzenegger about how he
blames California Governor Gray Davis for the state's $38 billion
deficit and then demanded: "Do you blame President Bush for the
more than $450 billion deficit in the United States as a whole?"

3) "A lot of California Democrats were salivating at the thought
that Mr. Panetta himself might jump into the Governor's race," Ted
Koppel gushed on Thursday's Nightline about his only guest.
Describing Leon Panetta as a "good, strong, sensible politician,"
Koppel pleaded with him: "Not to press the issue too much, but
since it's gonna happen anyway, why not have a, you know, a good,
strong, sensible politician like yourself to say, well, let's make
the best of a bad deal and here I am and I'll try and help make it
work?"

4) Come to America, meet and marry a U.S. journalist and become
more liberal. A profile of Arnold Schwarzenegger in Friday's
Washington Post related how a film producer claimed
Schwarzenegger's "politics were to the right of Genghis Khan," but
"his thinking has definitely evolved over the years" since he
married NBC News reporter Maria Shriver, to the point where "I
would call him a kind of Shriver Republican. His views on many
issues have been tempered by Maria and her family." Appearing on
FNC's Fox and Friends, Schwarzenegger admitted that his father-in-
law, liberal Democrat Sargent Shriver, "has influenced me a lot."

5) NBC found a similarity between Arnold Schwarzenegger and Ronald
Reagan, but not an admirable one in the view of reporter George
Lewis. On Friday's NBC Nightly News, Lewis suggested that on that
morning's Today Schwarzenegger had just pretended to not hear a
question about releasing his tax returns, an event which "evoked
memories of another movie star turned politician pretending not to
hear questions."

6) The world through Newsweek's prism: Howard Dean in a "centrist"
while Arnold Schwarzenegger is a "conservative."

7) "The Washington Times reports that Dean's budget balancing in
Vermont, much-cited by the news media, left the state with quote,
'one of the highest per capita tax burdens in the country,' end
quote," FNC's Brit Hume informed his viewers on Thursday night.
Indeed, the misnomer is repeated incessantly by journalists at
major outlets. On Inside Washington over the weekend, Newsweek's
Martha Brant asserted that Howard Dean is "a fiscal conservative."
Sunday morning on CBS's Face the Nation, USA Today reporter Jill
Lawrence insisted: "He is a kind of a complicated mix of liberal
and moderate positions. He's a fiscal conservative."

8) NBC's Patricia Sabga backtracked Friday morning on her
Wednesday night claim that it's a scientific certainly that global
warming is the cause of high temperatures in Europe.

9) You read it here first. On Thursday, FNC's Special Report with
Brit Hume ran a story about the failed NIMBY, Not in My Back Yard,
efforts of Washington, DC's PBS affiliate to keep a day laborer
shelter from being built near their studios.

10) Letterman's "Top Ten Things Overheard During George W. Bush's
Vacation."


    > 1) Katie Couric certainly has chutzpah. On Thursday's Today,
beating Democratic operatives to the punch, Couric reminded
viewers of Arnold Schwarzenegger's "baggage," from "smoking
marijuana" to "using steroids during his body-building career" to
being "the son of a Nazi Party member" to "allegations" that he's
"sexually harassed women and committed infidelity."

    But on Monday morning, she dared to scold Republican
gubernatorial candidate Bill Simon as she cited a newspaper report
about how a Simon strategist promised to spotlight "the actor's
raunchy past and liberal social views." Couric then demanded:
"How dirty will you get?"

    So far, not as dirty as Couric was last Thursday.

    Couric's "question" in full, on the August 7 Today, to
Democratic strategist Darry Sragow: "Let me ask you about his, his
baggage, if you will. He's admitted smoking marijuana, using
steroids during his body-building career. He's the son of a Nazi
Party member. He said he was prejudiced before overcoming those
feelings by working with the Simon Weisenthal Center in Los
Angeles and the Dean of the Center said an investigation of
Schwarzenegger's late father, conducted at the actor's request,
found no evidence of war crimes. Through his publicist he's denied
allegations published in Premiere magazine in March 2001, that he
sexually harassed women and committed infidelity. All those
things, are they gonna be front and center, Darry, if you, do you
think in this campaign?"

    For more on that interview session:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030807_extra.asp#2

    Fast forward to this morning, August 10, and she demanded of
Simon who appeared via satellite: "According to the Daily News, a
Simon strategist -- New York Daily News, it says a Simon
strategist said, 'His lagging campaign plans to win by stirring up
the base, spotlighting the actor's raunchy past and liberal social
views,' meaning Arnold Schwarzenegger. How dirty will you get?"

    Simon assured her he would not employ any dirty tactics.



    > 2) Matt Lauer on Friday morning tried to undermine the
recall effort by worrying about whether there's "collusion in the
Republican Party that goes all the way to the White House?" As if
something would be wrong with that. Over on ABC's Good Morning
America, Diane Sawyer reminded Arnold Schwarzenegger about how he
blames California Governor Gray Davis for the state's $38 billion
deficit and then demanded: "Do you blame President Bush for the
more than $450 billion deficit in the United States as a whole?"

    -- Today, August 8. After a session with Schwarzenegger, Lauer
turned to Art Torres, Chairman of the Democratic Party in
California. Lauer's most-loaded question:
    "In terms of the overall recall process, Mr. Torres, do you
think there's collusion in the Republican Party that goes all the
way to the White House?"
    Torres agreed, as transcribed by MRC analyst Ken Shepherd:
"Yes, I've said that since March of this year. It's been
reconfirmed by a number of factors. And now, more publicly, by
quote 'grassroots efforts.' And now the President says he may
campaign for Arnold as the race gets closer. Give me a break.
Karl Rove's fingerprints are all over this."

    -- ABC's Good Morning America. Diane Sawyer to Schwarzenegger:
"You have blamed Governor Gray Davis for the $38 billion deficit
in the state, which of course is a result and a companion of some
of the things you were just talking about. Do you blame President
Bush for the more than $450 billion deficit in the United States
as a whole?"

    Schwarzenegger, as he did all morning in all of his
interviews, stuck to pre-planned soundbites and avoided any real
answer.

    But Sawyer, MRC analyst Jessica Anderson observed, also hit
Schwarzenegger from the right: "As we heard, Rush Limbaugh coming
in from the right, the Republican side, has said you're not really
a California Republican, you're a liberal and there are touchstone
social issues -- I know you're pro-choice -- but I want to ask
about one of them since it's a state issue. What about gay
marriage?"
    Schwarzenegger: "I don't want to get into that now."



    > 3) Ted Koppel portrayed Leon Panetta as the salvation for
California Democrats as the ex-Democratic Congressman and Chief-
of-Staff to President Bill Clinton served as the sole guest on
Thursday's Nightline.

    "A lot of California Democrats were salivating at the thought
that Mr. Panetta himself might jump into the Governor's race,"
Koppel gushed on the August 7 Nightline. Describing Panetta as a
"good, strong, sensible politician," Koppel pleaded with him to
get into the race: "Not to press the issue too much, but since
it's gonna happen anyway, why not have a, you know, a good,
strong, sensible politician like yourself to say, well, let's make
the best of a bad deal and here I am and I'll try and help make it
work?"

    Koppel introduced his Thursday night show with a not so
favorable comparison between the reality in California and the
ideal we hold out for Iraq: "You have to wonder what they're
thinking in Baghdad. 'So these are the people,' Iraqis must be
saying to one another, 'who are going to teach us about democracy
and representational government.' Even if we could explain that
California is, at times, a universe unto itself, the political
process that is now unfolding in our most populous state bears a
greater resemblance to a train wreck than to anything we might
recommend to another country."

    MRC analyst Jessica Anderson took note of how Koppel later
introduced his sole guest: "Our guest tonight is no stranger to
either California or national politics. Leon Panetta served as
Chief of Staff to President Bill Clinton and was a member of
Congress representing California for 16 years. A lot of California
Democrats were salivating at the thought that Mr. Panetta himself
might jump into the governor's race. He joins us tonight from
Seaside, California. You had too much common sense, or what?"

    Koppel's next question: "Not to press the issue too much, but
since it's gonna happen anyway, why not have a, you know, a good,
strong, sensible politician like yourself to say, well, let's make
the best of a bad deal and here I am and I'll try and help make it
work?"



    > 4) Come to America, meet and marry a U.S. journalist and
become more liberal.

    A profile of Arnold Schwarzenegger in Friday's Washington Post
related how a film producer claimed Schwarzenegger's "politics
were to the right of Genghis Khan," but "his thinking has
definitely evolved over the years" since he married NBC News
reporter Maria Shriver, to the point where "I would call him a
kind of Shriver Republican. His views on many issues have been
tempered by Maria and her family."

    Appearing on FNC's Fox and Friends the same morning,
Schwarzenegger admitted that his father-in-law, liberal Democrat
Sargent Shriver, "has influenced me a lot."

    An excerpt from the top of an August 8 front page Washington
Post story by Rene Sanchez, "Behind Fame, Actor's Policies Are a
Mystery." The excerpt:

The famed bodybuilder whom film director George Butler became
friends with more than two decades ago never would have had a
prayer as a political figure in today's California.

"When I first got to know him, his politics were to the right of
Genghis Khan," said Butler, whose 1977 documentary "Pumping Iron"
launched Arnold Schwarzenegger's long, lucrative celebrity career.

That was before Schwarzenegger joined Hollywood's elite. Or
married journalist Maria Shriver, a member of America's Democratic
royal family, the Kennedys. Or saw Los Angeles engulfed in
rioting. Or knew that his father belonged to the Nazi party during
World War II.

"His thinking has definitely evolved over the years," Butler said.
"I would call him a kind of Shriver Republican now. His views on
many issues have been tempered by Maria and her family."...

    END of Excerpt

    FNC's Brian Kilmeade raised the influence of the Kennedy-
Shriver clan, asking Schwarzenegger on Friday's Fox and Friends,
as taken down by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth:
    "Arnold, what has the Kennedy influence done for you? Because
we saw you on screen, on the big screen, in the documentary, in
Pumping Iron, and we got a feeling for your political beliefs
because you're very brash, you're very outgoing, from day one when
you came into this country. But now you're married to this Kennedy
clan, and I don't know how you did it, but you won them over. Even
Ted Kennedy was like, 'Look, I'm not for the recall, I want a
Democratic Governor, but I like Arnold.' What influence have they
had on you and your political beliefs?"
    Schwarzenegger: "Well, I think that when you hang out with a
family like that, when you're married into a family like that, you
learn a lot. I mean, you know, you have to understand that the
entire family has dedicated their lives to services for the
people. I mean, they all have been public servants. And my father-
in-law, of course, is one of the greatest human beings in the
world. And, you know, he has influenced me a lot, you know, he
started the Job Corps and legal aide for the poor and the Peace
Corps and all of those programs, so talking to him and talking to
him about reaching out or to my mother-in-law Eunice Kennedy
Shriver, who started the, you know, Special Olympics and all those
kind of programs for people with mental disabilities. It's
fantastic. I mean, you get inspired by those kinds of things. So
I'm sure that also had some influence. But, of course, you know, I
have been always fiscally conservative. I always believed very
strongly we should not spend more money than we have, and this is
the biggest problem that we have right now in this state."



    > 5) NBC found a similarity between Arnold Schwarzenegger and
Ronald Reagan, but not an admirable one in the view of reporter
George Lewis. On Friday's NBC Nightly News, Lewis suggested that
on that morning's Today Schwarzenegger had just pretended to not
hear a question about releasing his tax returns, an event which
"evoked memories of another movie star turned politician
pretending not to hear questions."

    "Then, there was this curious moment," Lewis asserted in an
August 8 NBC Nightly News story on Schwarzenegger's tour of the
morning shows. He then played a excerpt from Today with
Schwarzenegger pleading via satellite, "Say again?" Matt Lauer
repeated his question: "Are you going to make your tax returns for
the past several years available to the press?" Schwarzenegger,
pointing to his ear, insisted: "I didn't hear you."

    Lewis asserted: "The Today show says technicians know of no
audio problems."

    Over old video of Reagan as President getting into car at the
White House as he cupped his hand to his ear and yelled "What?",
Lewis recalled: "That evoked memories of another movie star turned
politician pretending not to hear questions. In the end, voters
forgave Reagan for the occasional dodge and now some observers say
voters may forgive Schwarzenegger."

    The public will certainly be more forgiving than the news
media.



    > 6) The world through Newsweek's prism: Howard Dean in a
"centrist" while Arnold Schwarzenegger is a "conservative."

    In last week's Newsweek cover story on Democratic presidential
candidate Howard Dean, Jonathan Alter insisted that Dean had
"developed a reputation as a centrist."

    On Sunday, Newsweek's home page featured this as its Web poll
of the day:

"Will Arnold Schwarzenegger become the next governor of
California?" The options for answers:

"-- Yes, the combination of name-recognition and his conservative
views will win him the election.

"-- No, voters will ultimately reject the political neophyte.

"Don't know, still too early to tell."

    As of Sunday night, that was the poll at:
http://www.msnbc.com/news/NW-front_Front.asp



    > 7) "The Washington Times reports that Dean's budget
balancing in Vermont, much-cited by the news media, left the state
with quote, 'one of the highest per capita tax burdens in the
country,' end quote," FNC's Brit Hume informed his viewers on
Thursday night.

    Indeed, the misnomer is repeated incessantly by journalists at
major outlets. Two examples from over the weekend:

    -- On Inside Washington, Newsweek's Martha Brant asserted of
Howard Dean: "He's also a fiscal conservative. And economically
he's not as much of a wild-eyed liberal as people think he is."

    -- Sunday morning on CBS's Face the Nation, USA Today reporter
Jill Lawrence insisted: "He is a kind of a complicated mix of
liberal and moderate positions. He's a fiscal conservative and he
was in Vermont."

    Last Wednesday in an online chat session, Newsweek's Jonathan
Alter, the MRC's Tim Graham noticed, proclaimed: "When the word
gets out that Dean isn't liberal -- and in fact is quite
conservative -- on fiscal issues, he'll pick up more McCain
support." Alter asserted in answer to another question: "On fiscal
issues, he's far to the right of [Ted] Kennedy."

    (Alter also made clear his agreement with Dean's disdain for
the Bush tax cuts: "He would repeal the Bush tax cuts which are
heavily weighted toward the wealthy. That would bring us back to
where the tax system was under Clinton. It hardly sapped
innovation then -- and wouldn't in the future. The tax cut, to my
mind, was a huge mistake economically. Whether it was a mistake
politically depends on how the economy does between now and the
election.")

    For the August 6 online session with Alter:
http://www.msnbc.com/m/nw/talk/archive.asp?lt=080603_alter

    Some other recent examples of reporters calling Dean a "fiscal
conservative," and then an excerpt from the Washington Times story
cited by Hume:

    -- New York Times reporter Jodi Wilgoren and David Rosenbaum
in a July 30 profile of Dean: "He remains a fiscal conservative."

    -- "As Governor, Dean Was Fiscal Conservative," declared the
front page headline over an August 3 Washington Post story by
Michael Powell.

    -- "He is a rock-ribbed budget hawk," John Cloud charged in
the August 11 edition of Time magazine.

    For more about the above three stories:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030804.asp#3

    An MRC Media Reality Check last week by Tim Graham collated
these quotes from the August 11 Newsweek and U.S. News:

    -- Newsweek's Jonathan Alter insisted that in Vermont "Dean
focused on fiscal responsibility."

    -- In U.S. News & World Report, Roger Simon located those who
"find Dean's style invigorating," including self-declared
Republican Joe Mathews, who said he'll vote Dean "because he
admires the fiscal conservatism Dean displayed in 11 years as
Governor. 'What the rest of the country is starting to find out,'
he says, 'is Dean is not particularly left wing. And as far as
checkbook issues, he is to the right of George Bush, because if it
isn't in the bank, Dean doesn't spend it.'"

    This represents a bizarre definition of "fiscal conservatism"
-- hike spending all you want to increase government meddling in
people's lives, but if the budget is balanced, then you are a
"fiscal conservative."

    An August 7 Washington Times story by Donald Lambro, "Dean's
budget-balancing act left taxpayers in red," undermined the
media's clams about how Dean is any kind of a conservative on
spending and taxes. An excerpt:

Vermont had one of the highest per capita tax burdens in the
country when Howard Dean left the governorship in January to run
for president.

Mr. Dean, a Democrat who calls himself a "fiscal conservative,"
says he balanced all his state budgets by cutting spending. And
allies and critics alike praise his budget-balancing record.

Vermont enjoyed a budget surplus this year while most states were
in the red because of the recession that began three years ago.

What the former governor doesn't say is that he raised hundreds of
millions of dollars in higher taxes, including sales taxes,
cigarette taxes, property taxes and corporate taxes, to balance
the books while paying for his social welfare proposals.

After 11 years under Mr. Dean's governorship, Vermont now ranks in
the top tier of high-tax states, a fiscal legacy that President
Bush's campaign strategists say they intend to highlight should
Mr. Dean become the Democratic presidential nominee next year.
Congressional Quarterly's Governing magazine, based on data from
the U.S. Census Bureau, ranks Vermont second highest among the 50
states in the amount of tax revenue collected as a percentage of
personal income in 2001 — about 9 percent to 10 percent.

In a separate ranking that measured state tax revenue per capita
in 2001, Vermont was in second place with six other high-tax
states, including Massachusetts and California.

Another ranking in June by the Government Finance Officers
Association put Vermont in 12th place when state and local tax
burdens are combined, well ahead of more populous industrial
states such as New Jersey, Michigan and Illinois.

Vermont's budget has climbed sharply, too, from $662 million in
1991 to $1.8 billion last year. Between 1997 and last year,
inflation and population growth combined totaled 18.1 percent, but
spending rose 51.7 percent.

Once known for its Yankee thrift, the state has become a mecca for
affluent liberals from neighboring New York. Vermont's sole
congressman, independent Rep. Bernard Sanders, is an avowed
socialist....

    END of Excerpt

    For the article in full:
http://www.washtimes.com/national/20030806-113650-4135r.htm

    That story didn't sit too well with CNN's Aaron Brown, the
MRC's Ken Shepherd noticed. Previewing next day newspaper
headlines, on the August 6 NewsNight, Brown held up a color fax of
the Washington Times and complained: "Down at the bottom here, I
found this interesting. Maybe the paper's leading with its
politics a bit. 'Dean's Budget-balancing Act Left Taxpayers in the
Red, Bush Campaign Braces to Slam Record.' I'm not sure that
that's necessarily a great issue for the Bush campaign, but
perhaps it is. Anyway, Governor Dean raised some taxes, but he had
no deficit. I guess it depends on what you want."



    > 8) NBC's Patricia Sabga backtracked Friday morning on her
Wednesday night claim that it's a scientific certainly that global
warming is the cause of high temperatures in Europe.

    From London, on the August 6 NBC Nightly News, Sabga warned
that "scientists attribute the extreme temperatures to what's been
described as a dome of hot air hovering over Europe, a summer
weather pattern that may become the norm." Sean Seabrook,
identified on screen as a "meteorologist," then asserted:
"Scientists appreciate now that global warming is taking place and
I think these occurrences of heat waves will become more frequent,
so this may be a sign of things to come." For more, see:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030807.asp#1

    But on Friday's Today, MRC analyst Ken Shepherd noticed, Sabga
concluded another story from London on the heat wave: "Not
surprisingly, the sweltering temperatures have raised questions
about global warming. While scientists say there's no clear
evidence to link these higher temperatures to manmade climate
change, they are warning, however, that these higher temperatures
are likely to become the norm."



    > 9) You read it here first. On Thursday, FNC's Special Report
with Brit Hume ran a story about the failed NIMBY, Not in My Back
Yard, efforts of Washington, DC's PBS affiliate to keep a day
laborer shelter from being built near their studios.

    The August 1 CyberAlert disclosed: PBS cares about the riff-
raff and plight of undocumented aliens and condemning mean-
spirited conservatives for not caring about them -- think of many
prime time PBS specials on those being "left behind" and lectures
from Bill Moyers -- but not when they actually have to see them
next door. This week, Sharon Percy Rockefeller, CEO of WETA, the
Washington, DC PBS station really located in Arlington County,
Virginia, lashed out at the county board for voting to build a
pavilion, to house day laborers waiting for work, next door to
WETA's studios where the PBS NewsHour and Washington Week are
taped. See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030801.asp#6

    On his August 7 FNC show, Hume set up a story: "It's called
NIMBY, an acronym for Not In My Backyard, and it's often applied
to people who support noble causes in theory, as long as the
structures to support those fine causes are not built in their
neighborhoods. Now that acronym appears to apply to the folks at
the Public Broadcasting station near us, right here in
Washington."

    FNC's Brian Wilson filled in the story, explaining over video
of a WETA-TV building and the park area next door to be used for
the shelter: "WETA is the Washington area flagship station for the
highbrow, culturally aware, Public Broadcasting System. It's home
to programs like the always politically correct NewsHour with Jim
Lehrer. But the folks at WETA showed little tolerance when it came
to the needs of area day laborers trying to scratch out a living.
Arlington County, Virginia officials proposed building a $100,000
pavilion on county owned land near WETA, a place for the day
laborers to escape the elements, get a drink of water and use the
bathroom. When the folks at WETA heard that, they sent out their
big guns to the Arlington County board meeting to fight the
proposal. Sharon Percy Rockefeller is President and CEO of WETA,
and incidentally, the wife of millionaire Democratic Senator Jay
Rockefeller."
    Sharon Rockefeller, CEO of WETA, at the Arlington County Board
of Supervisors meeting on July 29, in video from the local cable
system: "We do not favor this option. It would absolutely
complicate our lives and make it difficult for our employees and
our guests. [edit jump] I don't think it's going to be a very open
and welcoming environment for very high office holders in the
United States."
    Wilson: "A group representing the day laborers was dismayed by
that approach, but not surprised."
    Louis Ramos, Employment Education Center: "There is always
going to be that not in my backyard mentality. And it's
unfortunate but that's just part of the territory."
    Wilson: "In the end, county officials voted 4 to 1 against
WETA and for the day laborers. Faced with that vote and some
publicity that makes WETA seem perhaps a bit uncaring, the PBS
flagship station is trying now to make the best of the situation.
Chief Operating Officer Joseph Bruns tells Fox News, ‘We've long
been good citizens of Arlington County and will do everything we
can to make it work satisfactorily.' That make the best of it
attitude has been adopted by the group representing the day
laborers."
    Ramos: "I'm looking forward to working together with them on
making this pavilion a success because we are going to be there
for a long time."
    Wilson concluded: "And that means for many years to come the
very high office holders that WETA is so concerned about will just
have to contend with the sight of poor, but hard working people
standing nearby as they come to address the culturally elite
audience of PBS. In Washington, Brian Wilson, Fox News."

    Remember this the next time you see anyone on PBS condemning
meanspirited or uncaring conservatives.



    > 10) From the August 8 Late Show with David Letterman, the
"Top Ten Things Overheard During George W. Bush's Vacation." Late
Show Web site: http://www.cbs.com/latenight/lateshow/

10. "This vacation is flying by -- only 33 days left"

9. "Dang, Springer's a rerun"

8. "These margaritas are weapons of mass destruction"

7. "Whoever's in charge really screwed up the economy"

6. "My God! Mars is coming right at us!"

5. "Don't worry, George. In 17 months, you'll have the longest
vacation of your life"

4. "Better start making stuff up for the State of the Union
Address"

3. "I'm itching to declare another war"

2. "Proceed with 'Operation Letterman.' Make it look like an
accident"

1. "Sitting around doing nothing reminds me of being President"


-- Brent Baker


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