|
Friday, January 02, 2004
The Feminist Press is re-issuing a series of pulp novels (with their original covers) written by women: The New York Times reviewed the first three in the series.
posted by jeev |
7:14 PM |

Tuesday, December 30, 2003
See, this scares me. They really do believe they were sent from God: AUSTIN -- Vice President Cheney's Christmas card this year not only offers best wishes in this holiday season but also bears the following quotation from Benjamin Franklin at the Constitutional Convention: "And if a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without His notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without His aid?" Food for thought there: a heavy meal, in fact. From Molly Ivins.
posted by jeev |
9:11 PM |

Obligatory cute cat in Xmas present picture:
posted by jeev |
8:48 PM |

And the winner is: not the middle class:It was a merry Christmas for Sharper Image and Neiman Marcus, which reported big sales increases over last year's holiday season. It was considerably less cheery at Wal-Mart and other low-priced chains. We don't know the final sales figures yet, but it's clear that high-end stores did very well, while stores catering to middle- and low-income families achieved only modest gains.
Based on these reports, you may be tempted to speculate that the economic recovery is an exclusive party, and most people weren't invited. You'd be right. So says Paul Krugman in the New York Times today.
posted by jeev |
6:49 PM |

Monday, December 29, 2003
Like coffee? Like robust, open-source software? Think Mozilla is cool? Then this is for you.
Via Meercat and Anil Dash.
posted by jeev |
6:25 PM |

More on Dick Cheney's old friends:Halliburton, a large energy services, engineering and construction firm, works for governments all over the world. A crucial factor in KBR's selection, members of the planning group said, was an existing Army contract it secured to provide logistical support around the world. It won that contract in a bidding process in December 2001. The Pentagon has cited that competition to deflect criticism about KBR's no-bid contract in Iraq.
In awarding the logistics contract, the Army acknowledged last year, it failed to consider that the company was under criminal investigation for a previous Pentagon contract, even though that inquiry was disclosed in Halliburton's annual report.
The absence of competition in the selection of KBR for Iraqi oil work was meant to be remedied shortly after the war ended. "Everyone realized the selection of KBR was going to look bad, so the idea was to compete it out as quickly as possible," said another task force member.
But those competitively bid contracts have yet to be awarded, and the amount of Halliburton's work in Iraq has grown steadily. From the New York Times. You can use "formyfriends" and "writethis" if you don't want to register.
posted by jeev |
10:09 AM |

|
|