-Caveat Lector-

F
              ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
     5pm EDT, Saturday October 4, 2003 (Vol. Eight; No. 184)
  The 1,590th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

> Media Eagerly Slime Schwarzenegger So Democrats Don't Have To
> ABC's Rooney Exhorts Davis to Be Harsher: "It's Sexual Assault"
> Katie Couric Favorably Compares Arnold's Reaction to Clinton's
> Dozens of Celebrities Sign Vote No on Recall Ad to Keep Davis
> Dan Rather Turns Good Employment News Into Bad News

    #### Distributed to more than 14,000 subscribers by the Media
Research Center, bringing political balance to the news media
since 1987. The MRC is the leader in documenting, exposing and
neutralizing liberal media bias. Visit the MRC on the Web:
http://www.mediaresearch.org. CyberAlerts from this year are at:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/archive/cyber/welcome.asp
For 2002: http://www.mediaresearch.org/archive/cyber/archive02.asp
    Subscribe/unsubscribe information, as well as a link to the
MRC donations page, are at the end of this message.
    When posted, this CyberAlert will be readable at:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20031004.asp ####

1) Not slimed by dirty politics from Democrats but from the media
which continue to highlight suspiciously revealed comments about
Nazis and to troll for women to denounce Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Friday night all the networks picked up on the claim he once said
he "admired" Hitler and highlighted, just days before the
election, the claims of another woman who alleged he groped her
over 20 years ago, but neither CBS or NBC bothered to point out
how the woman made the charge at a left-wing press conference
which unveiled anti-Schwarzenegger TV ads. ABC's Linda Douglass
insisted "there is no evidence that Democrats planted the stories
about his alleged groping of women or past statements he might
have made about Hitler." She should know since she and her media
colleagues are doing the sliming so Democrats don't have to.

2) California Governor Gray Davis just isn't harsh enough for
ABC's Brian Rooney. When Davis, during an interview excerpted on
Friday's Good Morning America, refrained from denouncing
Schwarzenegger over the groping and Nazi allegations, maintaining
that it's up to voters to "decide how much weight to put on it,"
Rooney lectured Davis: "He denied some of it, admitted some of it
and apologized. He may have admitted some things that are a
criminal offense -- it's sexual assault."

3) Friday's Today featured a session with the woman who remembered
being touched once by Arnold Schwarzenegger in 1975 and feminist
lawyer Gloria Allred, but Today's Katie Couric, in a surprising
question, favorably compared Schwarzenegger's reaction to charges
of sexual impropriety with how Clinton reacted and how Democrats
then said sexual activity didn't matter. Couric pressed Senator
Dianne Feinstein: "He has admitted to bad behavior, which is more
than President Clinton did when he was faced with similar charges,
at least right away. Do you think Arnold Schwarzenegger has
handled this well, and what about Democrats who say someone's
personal behavior really doesn't have anything to do with their
professional capabilities as many said in the case of Bill
Clinton?"

4) Dozens of celebrities had their names listed Friday in a full
page ad, in the Daily Variety trade newspaper, urging a "no" vote
on the recall so Gray Davis can remain in office. Amongst the 46
signers: Richard Dreyfuss, Barbra Streisand, Cybill Shepherd,
Pierce Brosnan, Warren Beatty, Jack Nicholson and Annette Bening.

5) The good news was bad news to CBS and Dan Rather. The Labor
Department reported Friday that the unemployment rate held steady
at 6.1 percent in September while payrolls increased by 57,000
jobs, the first monthly payroll rise since January. But Rather
emphasized how "a lot of people who need jobs can't find them" and
though "the economy actually created more jobs than it lost for
the first time in eight months," that wasn't "nearly enough to
meet demand." Rather set up a story by warning that "with jobs
still hard to find," people are being forced to go into the
military and those in the military can't afford to leave.


+ Editor's Note: Some media outlets are still obsessed with
"Leakgate." On Friday night, CNN's Aaron Brown devoted the entire
hour of NewsNight to the subject and ABC's Nightline featured a
group of former CIA staffers upset about the name getting
published and how the White House is improperly trying to impute
political motives to Joe Wilson.


    > 1) Not slimed by dirty politics from Democrats but from the
media which continue to highlight suspiciously revealed comments
about Nazis and to troll for women to denounce Arnold
Schwarzenegger.

    Friday night all the networks picked up on the claim
Schwarzenegger once said he "admired" Hitler and highlighted
without hesitation, just days before the election, the claims of
another woman who alleged he groped her over 20 years ago, but
neither CBS or NBC bothered to point out how the woman made the
charge at a left-wing press conference which unveiled anti-
Schwarzenegger TV ads.

    ABC's Linda Douglass, who on Thursday night, a mere five days
before the election, first quoted from the questionable three-
decade old documentary transcripts which cited Schwarzenegger as
saying he "admired" Adolph Hitler, on Friday night insisted "there
is no evidence that Democrats planted the stories about his
alleged groping of women or past statements he might have made
about Hitler."

    She should know since she and her media colleagues are doing
the sliming so Democrats don't have to. And if he only "might have
made" the statements about Hitler then why did she so eagerly
report them? See the October 3 CyberAlert for the Douglass story
on the October 2 World News Tonight highlighting the quotes about
Hitler:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20031003.asp#4

    Friday's New York Times, the MRC's Rich Noyes noticed,
provided a clue as to why ABC ran with the quotes: The New York
Times had the same material since Tuesday and so either Douglass
wanted to beat them or the source got tired of waiting for the
Times to do his or her dirty work and called ABC. In a story
titled, "Schwarzenegger Admired Hitler, Book Proposal Says," Times
reporters Adam Nagourney and David D. Kirkpatrick disclosed:
    "A copy of the proposal for the book, which would have been
entitled The Master Plan, was provided to The New York Times on
Tuesday by someone who has no obvious affiliation with any of the
California campaigns. The person provided the copy on the
condition that his identity be kept secret and would not explain
the motivation for releasing it. But the person was aware that the
disclosure, coming within days of the California recall election,
could damage Mr. Schwarzenegger's campaign."

    For the October 3 New York Times story:
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/03/national/03BOOK.html

    Naturally, Friday's morning shows all picked up on the Nazi
quotes which Douglass cited the night before and which were the
focus of the Friday New York Times story. Katie Couric opened
NBC's Today: "Good morning. Arnold Schwarzenegger on the
defensive. Now the California candidate is responding to charges
that he made admiring remarks about Adolf Hitler."

    But on Friday night Douglass used her World News Tonight air
time to defend herself and colleagues against Schwarzenegger's
criticism of their news judgment even as Douglass and her CBS and
NBC colleagues relayed the uncorroborated claims of another woman
who came forward at a left-wing, anti-Schwarzenegger press
conference.

    Douglass began her October 3 story: "Arnold Schwarzenegger
says he's being slimed by dirty politics even though there is no
evidence that Democrats planted the stories about his alleged
groping of women or past statements he might have made about
Hitler."
    Schwarzenegger: "This is a campaign, this is the last four
days, and people are now attacking me about women stuff, attacking
me with the Hitler stuff, they're attacking me, anything they can
find."
    Douglass: "He said he believes he is the victim of
professional political hit men."
    Schwarzenegger: "I only guess it is to destroy my campaign and
people have been paid, people have been encouraged to do that. I
have no idea because this is my first political campaign."
    Douglass: "Women continue to come forward to accuse
Schwarzenegger of groping."
    Schwarzenegger: "I don't have a memory about twenty years ago
or ten years ago or any of those allegations."
    Douglass: "Colete Brooks said he grabbed her buttocks 22 years
ago when she was a young TV intern."
    Colette Brooks: "He then proceeded to put his hands in that
very place of my anatomy."
    Douglass: "Brooks was surrounded by Democratic activists today
who are working hard to turn women voters against Schwarzenegger."

    Douglass at least noted how the woman made her allegations at
a press conference organized by Democratic activists, a relevant
point ignored by CBS and NBC.

    On Friday's CBS Evening News, after noting how Schwarzenegger
said he doesn't remember saying that he admired Hitler, reporter
Jerry Bowen moved on to how "more alleged groping victims came
forth."
    Colette Brooks, alleged victim: "He said to me quote unquote,
'Nice ass.' [edit jump] He then proceeded to put his hands in that
very place of my anatomy."

    Over on the NBC Nightly News, George Lewis began: "As Arnold
Schwarzenegger's bus tour rolls through California, he's hit a few
political speed bumps: [video zeroing in on New York Times
headline: "Schwarzenegger Admired Hitler, Book Proposal says"]
Published allegations that he once expressed admiration for Adolph
Hitler following earlier allegations that he groped several women.
Two of those women, E. Laine Stockton and Colete Brooks, talked to
reporters today."
    Brooks: "He said to me quote unquote, 'Nice ass.' Forgive the
accent. He then proceeded to put his hands in that very place of
my anatomy."

    When saying "nice ass," Brooks mimicked Schwarzenegger's
accent.

    A Reuters story, "Angry Women Launch Anti-Schwarzenegger TV
Ad," reported Brooks made her charge at a press conference
organized by a bunch of left-wing groups, including moveon.org,
and that the alleged incident occurred at CNN. Reuters relayed:
"Businesswoman Colette Brooks told Friday's news conference that
in 1981, while she was working as an intern at CNN, Schwarzenegger
remarked on her 'nice ass' and groped her buttocks. Brooks did not
report the incident at the time because she feared for her job.
'How can we support someone who puts more value on my ass than the
assets I have to contribute to the state of California?,' Brooks
said." See:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=1895&ncid=1895&e=2
&u=/nm/20031003/us_nm/politics_california_women_dc



    > 2) California Governor Gray Davis just isn't harsh enough
for ABC's Brian Rooney. When Davis, during an interview excerpted
on Friday's Good Morning America, refrained from denouncing
Schwarzenegger over the groping and Nazi allegations, maintaining
that it's up to voters to "decide how much weight to put on it,"
Rooney lectured Davis: "He denied some of it, admitted some of it
and apologized. He may have admitted some things that are a
criminal offense -- it's sexual assault."

    Rooney later ruminated with Davis about how the two had once
discussed Schwarzenegger tales: "I know that you've heard stories
about Arnold Schwarzenegger -- I have -- and you and I once talked
about it." How chummy.

    ABC aired the Rooney piece with Davis just minutes after Linda
Douglass pointed out how "Democrats opened fire, going as far as
to suggest that his alleged behavior could be a crime."
    Douglass played this clip of Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren at a
press conference: "The truth is that the behavior described here
is a battery under California law."

    A bit later, journalist Rooney channeled politician Lofgren.

    MRC analyst Jessica Anderson took down Rooney's session with
Davis, taped in an office, as shown on the October 3 Good Morning
America:

    Davis: "I'm disturbed by what I've heard today and I know the
voters have a big decision to make in five days. I'm confident
that they'll make a judgment on Mr. Schwarzenegger's fitness to
hold office. I hope these things did not happen to the women
described. If they did, this is a matter voters will take into
account and decide how much weight to put on it when they're going
to vote for Arnold Schwarzenegger."
    Rooney: "He denied some of it, admitted some of it and
apologized. He may have admitted some things that are a criminal
offense -- it's sexual assault."
    Davis: "But we don't know what he admitted to, what he didn't
admit to. His story seems to constantly change. I'm just going to
let this all settle in until we know really what the facts are.
Let's just see what the full story is from Mr. Schwarzenegger
before I weigh in."
    Rooney: "Because you know, as well, that ABC News reported
some of these old quotations, going back to the 'Pumping Iron'
days, about how he admired Adolf Hitler."
    Davis: "Yeah, I find that particularly offensive. I don't see
how anyone can admire Adolf Hitler. Any decent American has to be
offended by that phrase."
    Rooney: "Back in August, Schwarzenegger's campaign chief told
the Sacramento Bee that this is not a position election, this is a
character election. If they established it as a character race,
why not meet them on those terms?...

    After Davis said he's not comfortable sitting in judgment, but
that Schwarzenegger's admiring Hitler "shocks the conscience,"
Rooney reminisced: "I know, I know that you've heard stories about
Arnold Schwarzenegger -- I have -- and you and I once talked about
it."
    Davis: "I have heard a ton of stories. I can't tell you how
many people have come to me with reported indiscretions and things
that you and I would pale about, but I said I'm not into this
business -- don't bother telling me."
    Rooney: "Do you look at him and wonder how he got this
far?...So it's not ever crossed your mind what it would be like to
hand this office over to Arnold Schwarzenegger?"

    For a picture and bio of Rooney:
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/wnt/WorldNewsTonight/rooney_brian_bio.html



    > 3) Friday's Today featured a session with the woman who
remembered being touched once by Arnold Schwarzenegger in 1975, E.
Laine Stockton, and feminist lawyer Gloria Allred, but Today's
Katie Couric, in a very surprising question, favorably compared
Schwarzenegger's reaction to charges of sexual impropriety with
how Clinton reacted and how Democrats then said sexual activity
didn't matter.

    Couric pressed California Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein:
"He has admitted to bad behavior, which is more than President
Clinton did when he was faced with similar allegations, at least
right away. Do you think Arnold Schwarzenegger has handled this
well, and what about Democrats who say someone's personal behavior
really doesn't have anything to do with their professional
capabilities as many said in the case of Bill Clinton?"

    Couric began the segment with Feinstein on the October 3
Today, MRC analyst Ken Shepherd observed, by cuing her up on the
groping allegations against Schwarzenegger: "How serious in your
view, are these allegations?"

    After Feinstein raised the Nazi quote, Couric wondered: "What
kind of impact do you think all of this will have at the polls?"

    But next, Couric challenged Feinstein with this refreshing
question from the right: "Let me ask you another question, if I
may, about these allegations of sexual misconduct against Arnold
Schwarzenegger. He has admitted to bad behavior, which is more
than President Clinton did when he was faced with similar
allegations, at least right away. Do you think Arnold
Schwarzenegger has handled this well, and what about Democrats who
say someone's personal behavior really doesn't have anything to do
with their professional capabilities as many said in the case of
Bill Clinton?"
    Feinstein replied: "Well, I don't necessarily agree with that.
I think your personal behavior does affect you in public office.
People look at people in public office, believe it or not, as role
models. What they do, the good they do in their life, the kind of
person they are, the kind of representation they give to the
people. We are a representative government. And, so, I think this
does affect it. I was deeply impacted by President Clinton. He
knows it. I know it. I like to believe and hope that we elect the
best among us, not some of the least among us."

    Couric followed up: "I know that you dismiss the notion that
this was all politics as some people in the Schwarzenegger
campaign have said. But don't you agree, Senator Feinstein, that
the timing of these allegations is rather suspicious, and it does
smack of dirty politics?"



    > 4) Dozens of celebrities had their names listed Friday in a
full page ad, in the Daily Variety trade newspaper, urging a "no"
vote on the recall so Gray Davis can remain in office. "Join us,"
the AP reported that the read in bold letters, followed by: "Vote
no on the recall." AP found that the list of 46 names included
"actors, producers, writers and studio chiefs."

    Amongst those signing, AP noted, were two with business ties
to Arnold Schwarzenegger: "Amy Pascal, Chairman of Sony's Columbia
Pictures, which distributed the Schwarzenegger films The 6th Day
and Last Action Hero; and Ron Meyer, President and Chief Operating
Officer of Vivendi Universal Entertainment, which distributed
Schwarzenegger's End of Days and Junior."

    Other names on the list, as culled from the AP story and an
AFP dispatch on Yahoo News:

- Richard Dreyfuss
- Danny Glover
- Barbra Streisand
- Larry David
- Cybill Shepherd
- James Cromwell
- Stacy Keach
- Rob Reiner
- Pierce Brosnan
- Warren Beatty
- Jack Nicholson
- Annette Bening
- James Brolin
- Robert Guillaume
- Norman Lear

    For the AP story:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=529&ncid=529&e=4&u
=/ap/20031003/ap_en_ce/recall_celeb_ad_2

    For the AFP story:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/afp/20031003/ts_afp
/us_politics_hollywood_031003193619

    For a picture and bio of any of the names above, go to the
Internet Movie Database ( http://imdb.com/ ) and under "search" in
the top left, choose "people" from the pull-down menu and enter
the full name.



    > 5) The good news was bad news to CBS and Dan Rather. The
Labor Department reported Friday that the unemployment rate held
steady at 6.1 percent in September while payrolls increased by
57,000 jobs, the first monthly payroll rise since January. But
Rather emphasized how "a lot of people who need jobs can't find
them" and though "the economy actually created more jobs than it
lost for the first time in eight months," that wasn't "nearly
enough to meet demand." Rather set up a story by warning that
"with jobs still hard to find," people are being forced to go into
the military and those in the military can't afford to leave.

    ABC's Peter Jennings and NBC's Tom Brokaw were more upbeat,
but neither ABC or NBC, nor CBS, corrected some dour reporting
from last month when they all showcased how the economy in August
had lost 93,000 jobs. On Friday, the Labor Department revised that
number to say that only half as many, 41,000, had really lost
their jobs in August.

    Back on the September 5 CBS Evening News, anchor John Roberts
announced: "The Labor Department today reported an unexpected
August surge in job cuts by U.S. employers. The disappointing
figures cast a shadow on recent indications that the economy is
finally starting to come out of the doldrums."

    For more on CBS's September 5 coverage as well as that
delivered by ABC and NBC, see the September 8 CyberAlert:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030908.asp#5

    Fast forward to Friday night, October 3, and on World News
Tonight ABC's Jennings observed: "There's promising news on the
job market today. The Labor Department says that unemployment held
steady at 6.1 percent last month. And after seven months of
losses, the economy created 57,00 new jobs in September. They are
welcome headlines. There is, of course, as always, more to the
story."

    Betsy Stark suggested that the job market recovery "may
finally be here" with big job gains in business services and
health care but, she cautioned, the manufacturing sector still
lost jobs.

    NBC Nightly News anchor Tom Brokaw was upbeat: "Good news on
the job front in this country. For the first time in eight months
businesses added jobs, 57,000 of them in September, and the
unemployment rates stayed steady at 6.1 percent. The manufacturing
sector continues to struggle but there are some manufacturing
businesses in this country that are thriving and growing."

    Chip Reid proceeded to look at some success stories, citing
American Axle and Manufacturing, Harley-Davidson, Louisville
Slugger, John Deere, Trek bicycles -- all thriving due to high-
tech expertise.

    All that good news didn't rub off on Dan Rather, who led the
Friday CBS Evening News with the supposedly bad news, as taken
down by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth:
    "Good evening. The government's latest report on the job
market is mixed. It shows at least some improvement by one
measure, some new jobs. But there is still a long way to go. A lot
of people who need jobs can't find them. The unemployment rate was
the same in September as it was in August -- 6.1 percent. Here's
the surprise. The economy actually created more jobs than it lost
for the first time in eight months, but not nearly enough to meet
demand. With jobs still hard to find, Anthony Mason reports many
Americans are going to work for their uncle -- Uncle Sam."

    Anthony Mason outlined the premise: "How tight is the job
market? Ask Eric Rosa, who just graduated high school."
    Eric Rosa: "^It's getting really hard to find work out here."
    Mason: "Or Aina Gayares, looking for a job in retail sales."
    Mason: "And you couldn't find anything?"
    Aina Gayares: "Nothing."
    Mason: "Neither could 20-year-old Milena Kravchenski."
    Milena Kravchenski: "There aren't any jobs out there. And you
just get, you know, angry, and you just give up after awhile."
    Mason: "But Milena didn't give up. Instead, she and Eric and
Aina have signed up with the Army. Is this economy helping your
recruiting efforts?"
    Lieutenant Colonel John Gillette, U.S. Army: "We found the
economy has been a significant factor in recruiting for us."
    Mason: "Lieutenant Colonel John Gillette says the Army was
looking for 100,000 recruits this year. Have you met those goals?"
    Gillette: "Yes, we've made and exceeded those goals."
    Mason: "Because even in a recovery, this economy is still
struggling to create jobs."
    George W. Bush: "Things are getting better, but there's still
work to do."
    Mason: "In fact, between February and August, the economy lost
nearly 600,000 jobs, and 9 million Americans are still looking for
work. That weak job market is making more people look at the
military, but it's also making fewer people leave. So many sailors
are staying in the service, for example, that the Navy has
actually cut 700 recruiting jobs. But the military still offers a
steady paycheck and good benefits."
    Rosa: "It's a guaranteed some kind of a job, so-"
    Mason concluded: "So for new recruits taking the oath of
enlistment, it's not just the Army. It's employment. Anthony
Mason, CBS News, New York."

    For much more on the unemployment/payroll numbers, see
Saturday's Washington Post story:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A41979-2003Oct3.html


----

    # For those interested, the Late Show with David Letterman on
Friday night had a Rush Limbaugh-inspired "Top Ten" list, the "Top
Ten Items on Rush Limbaugh's To-Do List." If you are sensitive to
derogatory comments about Limbaugh, however, you should avoid it.
Otherwise, it's online at:
http://www.cbs.com/latenight/lateshow/top_ten/archive/ls_topten_ar
chive2003/ls_topten_archive_20031003.shtml

    # If you didn't have time during the week to make a donation
to the MRC, please consider doing so now. We watch all the biased
news so you don't have to, but the MRC needs the support of
CyberAlert readers pay for all the people, research and equipment
to do that and to make CyberAlerts possible.

    So, please help keep me going by making a donation to the MRC.
We've made it easier and safer by setting up the MRC with a PayPal
account. Use the link below or follow the instructions to find the
link on the MRC's home page. A $25 donation a year works out to
just ten cents per CyberAlert you receive.

    After you donate, let me know so I can thank you. E-mail me
at: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

    If you've made it this far, to the very end, I know that you
appreciate the information which CyberAlert uniquely conveys.


-- Brent Baker


    >>> Support the MRC, an educational foundation dependent upon
contributions which make CyberAlert possible, by providing a tax-
deductible donation. To safely and securely donate via PayPal:
https://www.paypal.com/xclick/[EMAIL PROTECTED]&i
tem_name=Media+Research+Center&item_number=Media+Research+Center&n
o_note=1&tax=0&currency_code=USD

    Or, go to the MRC's home page ( http://www.mediaresearch.org )
and click on the gold "Support the MRC" logo in the top right
corner. That will take you to the same place.

    To subscribe to CyberAlert, go to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cybersub.asp

    Or, send a blank e-mail to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

    To unsubscribe, use the link at the very bottom of this
message.

    Send problems and comments to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

    You can learn what has been posted each day on the MRC's Web
site by subscribing to the "MRC Web Site News" distributed every
weekday afternoon. To subscribe, go to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cybersub.asp#webnews <<<

====================================================================
Update your profile here:
http://mrccyberalert.u.tep1.com/survey/?bUrD57.a6Hlsy.d2JhY29u

Unsubscribe here:
http://mrccyberalert.u.tep1.com/survey/?bUrD57.a6Hlsy.d2JhY29u.u

Delivered by Topica Email Publisher, http://www.email-publisher.com/




"I pledge Allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America and to
the REPUBLIC for which it stands,  one Nation under God,indivisible,with
liberty and justice for all."

 visit my web site at
http://www.voicenet.com/~wbacon My ICQ# is 79071904
for a precise list of the powers of the Federal Government linkto:
http://www.voicenet.com/~wbacon/Enumerated.html

www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
<A HREF="http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to