tiny dancer wrote: Came across this article as I was searching for a cite to McCains nasty joke about Chelsea Clinton> McCain's Out-of-Control Anger: Does He Have the Temperament to Be President? WASHINGTON -- Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., is considered a front-runner for the 2008 race, but does McCain have the temperament to be president? As portrayed by the
On 30 Aug 2008 13:04:57 -0400, "Martin Shackelford" <mshack4@sbcglobal.net> wrote: Another clue is that the people involved in the investigation still wanted to do the segment--Hewitt, Mike Wallace and the segment producer. That's not a clue of any sort that thry had turned up any evidence that supported her story. If true of all three, it just means what the psychiatrist termed a "storyteller"
On 29 Aug 2008 09:26:53 -0400, "Martin Shackelford" <mshack4@sbcglobal.net> wrote: They did their own investigating, and Liebengood provided them with some information from his Church Committee days. As the segment never aired, I don't know the details of this. Yeah, that makes it real helpful. And since you don't know the details, you don't know what investigating they did ... or what
"The first headmaster of Stowe school, JF Roxburgh, declared his goal to be turning out young men who would be "acceptable at a dance and invaluable in a shipwreck." A mixture of courtesy and courage used to be essential to the idea of a British citizen's character. Brits were the sort of people who knew both how to survive a Blitz and queue politely. Similarly, Robert Baden-Powell, the founder
EB wrote: On Jun 2, 12:25 pm, Erin <squig...@sympatico.ca> wrote: EB wrote: On Jun 1, 9:09�pm, zor...@comcast.net wrote: On May 29, 11:17�am, EB <rickblac...@hotmail.com> wrote: On May 29, 3:38�pm, Erin <squig...@sympatico.ca> wrote: William Hazlitt (1778-1830) A portrait of the disagreeable temperament: