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This page contains all of the posts and discussion on MemeStreams referencing the following web page: Sunday NYT Sampler for 22 April 2007 | Part VI. You can find discussions on MemeStreams as you surf the web, even if you aren't a MemeStreams member, using the Threads Bookmarklet.

Sunday NYT Sampler for 22 April 2007 | Part VI
by noteworthy at 11:14 am EDT, Apr 22, 2007

McCain is the hell-raiser who hides an introspective bent behind his pose as a cocky flyboy.

The problem was reported to the government last week by a farmer in Illinois who stumbled across the data on the Internet.

"I was bored and typed the name of my farm into Google to see what was out there."
She was able to identify almost 30,000 records in the database that contained Social Security numbers.
"I was stunned," she said. "The numbers were right there in plain view in this database that anyone can access."

"Tom is not afraid to stick to his guns."

"Instead of having turned to Washington for answers and solutions, y’all have turned to the person next to you."

"Some women just don’t have the get up and go."

The toll is visible in Hollandale, a tired town in the impoverished Delta region of northwest Mississippi.

Jamekia Brown, 22 and two months pregnant with her third child, lives next to the black people’s cemetery in the part of town called No Name, where multiple generations crowd into cheap clapboard houses and trailers.

So it took only a minute to walk to the graves of Ms. Brown’s first two children, marked with temporary metal signs because she cannot afford tombstones.

"We were a little late to the game. We should have been out there making these arguments, making the case more forcefully before people began framing the debate for us ... and in false terms."

In military terms, the American initiative to the Russians on missile defense will include an invitation "toward fundamental integration of our systems."

In Russia, how can anyone predict the future when it’s so hard to predict the past?

Why had historians not used these papers before? ... What really happened doesn’t fit any fashionable academic dogmas.




See also Parts I, II, III, IV, and V.


 
 
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