Posts Tagged country

Know More About Cross Country Movers

The global society in today’s times has become very mobile in nature. Moving or shifting from one’s current residence to a new one is a common phenomenon. The reasons for such moving can be varied. These may include marriage, divorce, transfer of jobs, educational purposes, or even the desire to explore new locations around the world. If you are planning to move you will require the help of movers. The further away from your residence you will move, the more expensive and complicated arrangements you will require. If you are deciding to move cross country, you will need the aid of cross country movers and the company of two men truck rates among the leading and most reputed movers in this regard.

The movement of cross country is a complex situation that demands complex, detailed, and proper arrangements. Sometimes, such moves can become stressful. Thus, in order to deal with such situations, you simply need to plan ahead. Nowadays, a lot of information on movers is easily and widely available. The World Wide Web is a good resource in such a context. You will find all relevant information such as details of obtaining moving trailer rental from movers of cross country movers such as two men truck, details of packing your household goods and furniture, on various other storage companies, and researching moving agents.

For cross country moving, you will need to bear some other essential factors in mind. If you and your family are moving along with your entire house or apartment’s belongings such as household furniture, clothing, books, household appliances and other personal goods then you will definitely need the aid of a reputed, reliable, and professional moving company such as two men truck. You have to be very careful in selecting a moving company. If you are moving cross country, you will need to look among some reputed cross country movers.

You should be made aware that cross country movers vary in different aspects. These include their respect for treating possessions, services offered, customer service, and their prices. In other words, the longer is the distance that you move, the more essential it becomes to get hold of a trustworthy company who will completely ensure your safe and secure travel for the whole distance. Two men truck is undoubtedly one of the best moving companies in this regard and you can avail their high quality services that is available round the clock.

In terms of cross country moving, you must also realize that movers for such a long distance will always be relatively expensive. This is due to the fact that they are taking a lot of responsibility to keep your possessions safe and secure. For such long distance moving, there is always more potential for theft or damage of goods. The probability is more when you travel separately from all your belongings and possessions. The best option would be go in for trustworthy cross country movers such as two men truck. You can do some homework and find out the best companies in this profession. All such information is readily available on the Internet.

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Prom dresses always in fashion – Kansas City Star

By MARY LIVERMORE BUSH
Special to The Star

SHANE KEYSER/Kansas City Star

“It’s so fluffy,” Briana Korycki 17, (left), said as she and fellow Lee’s Summit High School student Courtney Boedeker, 17, combed through a rack while trying on prom dresses at the Natalie M store on Thursday in Overland Park. Natalie M and Olathe North High School organized two fashion shows featuring prom dresses and models from about 30 metro high schools including Lees Summit and Lees Summit West.

T hough high school proms are still a few months off, the search has begun for what to wear to the glamorous events.

Several hundred high school students from more than 30 area schools have been making that search a little easier by modeling prom and after-5 wear at two fashion events that benefit school districts, school projects and educational foundations.

The first event has already occurred, but the second one, called “Rock the Runway,” will be Sunday at Overland Park’s Ritz Charles and celebrates the April opening of the Disney movie “Prom.” The fashion show will showcase dresses created by fashion designer Alfred Angelo, some which will be featured in the movie.

Courtney Boedeker, a senior at Lee’s Summit High School, is in the show and modeling for the first time.

“Modeling is a little girl’s dream, so I thought it would be fun,” Boedeker said. “Our ticket sales will help one of our school’s clubs, the FCCLA (Family Career and Community Leaders of America), so that makes the whole experience even better.”

Students from high schools in Kansas City, Lee’s Summit, Blue Valley, Shawnee Mission, Olathe and Kansas City, Kan., are among the many models in the two shows. Each student has sold at least 10 tickets to the events, with proceeds benefiting projects designated by participating schools. Students also get credit for community service.

Retailer Natalie M has teamed up with students from Olathe North High School’s fashion studio classes to present the fashion shows. Students have selected the dresses and tuxedoes they will be modeling, from Natalie M’s retail location in Overland Park.

Event chairman Barbra Gonzales, the department chairwoman for family and consumer sciences at Olathe North, said her students designed the posters and program covers for the fashion shows and coordinated with other schools as they learned firsthand how to produce a large event.

“Our students are experiencing what it’s like to work in a real fashion atmosphere,” said Gonzales, who also teaches fashion studio classes at Olathe North. “In addition to modeling, they are marketing the show, meeting the designer, staging the show, working with lighting — just a lot of behind-the-scenes work.”

The first show, “Fashion Live,” showcased the latest prom dresses designed by Tony Bowls. This was the second year Olathe North junior Leah Blefko participated in the Tony Bowls fashion show.

“I love seeing the finished product all come together and learning more about the production of a large show like this one,” she said.

Natalie Nearenberg, who opened Natalie M in 1973, said the local prom fashion events are now the largest of their kind in the country.

“We started doing this years ago as a fund-raiser for area schools,” Nearenberg said. “It has grown so much and turned into a great way to help with different high school activities and have some fun at the same time.”

Gonzales said the fashion shows not only allow students to experience an authentic fashion and retail environment but practice skills important in any career.

“Students participating in these shows use communication, organization and teamwork skills,” she said. “It’s a fantastic way to take learning to the next level.”

FASHION SHOW TICKETS AVAILABLE
“Rock the Runway,” featuring the latest prom fashions, will be Sunday, with shows at 10 a.m., 2 p.m. and 6 p.m.

The location is The Ritz Charles, 9000 W. 137th St. in Overland Park.

Tickets are $5 in advance and can be purchased from models at participating high schools, including Lee’s Summit and Lee’s Summit West. Advance tickets also are available at Natalie M, 12601 Metcalf Ave. in Overland Park. Tickets will be $10 at the door.

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Discount carrier to fly between Asheville, Florida – Asheville Citizen-Times

ASHEVILLE — A discount airline plans to fly twice weekly between Asheville Regional Airport and the Florida panhandle starting April 1.

Vision Airlines’ schedule calls for one flight each Thursday and Sunday between Asheville and Northwest Florida Regional Airport, which is located a few miles from Fort Walton Beach.

The Thursday flight from Asheville would continue on to St. Petersburg-Clearwater International Airport.

USA Today reported that Vision, based in the Atlanta suburb of Suwanee, Ga., will begin offering flights to 20 U.S. cities on Tuesday. The company will offer cheap flights aimed at tourists as well as packages that include flight, hotel and rental cars.

It’s a model that has worked well for Allegiant, which has become one of the most profitable airlines in the country. Its routes include four between Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport in South Carolina and destinations in Florida.

“If Allegiant Airlines is Coke, then there’s always got to be a Pepsi,” David Meers, Vision’s chief operating officer, told USA Today. “We believe there’s a niche available in the marketplace to provide … packages to consumers at discounted prices.”

Read Tuesday’s Citizen-Times or return to CITIZEN-TIMES.com for more on this story.

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Palin Criticizes Manufacturers of ‘Blood Libel’ as Proponents of Speech Limits … – Fox News

Sarah Palin made a call to conscience Wednesday for those who would manufacture “a blood libel” for last weekend’s Arizona shooting, saying “acts of monstrous brutality … begin and end with the criminals who commit them, not collectively” with Americans exercising their constitutional freedoms.

The former Republican vice-presidential candidate, the target of many pontificators ascribing motive to gunman Jared Lee Loughner, charged in the Tucson attack that killed six and injured 14 others, had been silent since shortly after the Saturday shooting when she issued a two-line statement offering her prayers for the families and victims.

But Palin’s name — and those of others, including Republican Senate candidate Sharron Angle — had been central in the early accusations over what spurred the shooting. Liberal media pundits assigned blame by citing Palin’s political action committee’s website, which showed crosshairs on districts that it was targeting in the November midterm, including the district of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, the believed target of the gunman who was wounded in the shooting.

Others said Angle’s comments on the campaign trail also incited violence. The debate about heated political rhetoric ratcheted up so quickly and vigorously — even before Loughner had been identified as the alleged shooter — some Democratic lawmakers called for curbs on free speech.

In a Facebook posting issued Wednesday morning, Palin lamented the “irresponsible statements” of those casting blame on political figures.

“If you don’t like a person’s vision for the country, you’re free to debate that vision. If you don’t like their ideas, you’re free to propose better ideas. But, especially within hours of a tragedy unfolding, journalists and pundits should not manufacture a blood libel that serves only to incite the very hatred and violence they purport to condemn. That is reprehensible,” Palin said, referring to the Medieval term used to try to demonize Jews by accusing them of murdering Christians to use their blood in ritual.

She added that claims that the political rhetoric is somehow more heated today than ever before seem unfounded, noting that “back in those ‘calm days’” of the Republic, political differences were occasionally settled with “dueling pistols.”

Palin was immediately criticized for the statements.

“You know, Sarah Palin just can’t seem to get it, on any front. I think she’s an attractive person, she is articulate,” Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., reportedly told the Bill Press radio show. “But I think intellectually, she seems not to be able to understand what’s going on here.”

As Palin decried the exploitation of the Arizona shooting, some lawmakers said federal regulations are needed to stop heated speech.

Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-N.Y., on Monday referenced a comment by Angle in calling for a change in the nation’s political dialogue — by will or by law.

“‘Don’t retreat, reload.’ Someone in Nevada saying we may need to use Second Amendment remedies. There’s only one way to read this,” Slaughter said.

Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Calif., told Fox News that Angle “talked about people rising up and taking over the government by force, using their guns. She was very explicit.”

Sherman said that even if language used by Angle and her supporters hadn’t incited the shootings in Arizona, eventually it will lead to violence.

“I’m saying if you have a heart attack, stop smoking, not because nicotine may or may not have caused your last heart attack, you’ll never know, but it’s going to cause the next one,” Sherman said. “And if we continue to bring into the mainstream and treat as civil those who call for violence and disruption and assassination and revolution and insurrection, then whether that caused what happened in Tucson or not, it will cause the next tragedy.”

Angle defended herself in a statement released late Tuesday.

“Expanding the context of the attack to blame and to infringe upon the people’s constitutional liberties is both dangerous and ignorant. The irresponsible assignment of blame to me, Sarah Palin or the Tea Party movement by commentators and elected officials puts all who gather to redress grievances in danger,” Angle said.

“Finger-pointing toward political figures is an audience-rating game and contradicts the facts as they are known,” Angle added. “I have consistently called for reasonable political dialogue on policy issues to encourage civil political education and debate. Inappropriately attributing blame of a singular tragedy to achieve a political agenda is contrary to civil discourse, and is a media ploy to which I refuse to belong.”

In the wake of the shooting, the National Hispanic Media Coalition used the incident to reiterate its call for the FCC to update its definitions of hate speech in media. It also asked the FCC to “examine the extent and effects of hate speech in media, and non-regulatory options for counteracting the violence that extreme rhetoric breeds.”

Rep. Robert Brady, D-Pa., said he has no knowledge about what motivated Loughner to attack Giffords and the others, but he still wants legislation that bans the use of certain imagery when talking about congressional targets.

“I want to eliminate what may have been,” Brady told Fox News. “I’m not a psychologist … All I’m saying is you can’t put a bull’s eye or a crosshair on a member of Congress.”

And on Tuesday, Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Ore., was quoted in the Oregon Statesman-Journal saying he blamed conservative media personalities like Fox News’ Glenn Beck and radio host Rush Limbaugh.

“I hold them personally responsible. I don’t know how they can sleep at night after this,” Schrader said.

Loughner, the accused gunman with no discernible connection to American political discourse, has not stated why he allegedly shot 20 people in the assault at a Tucson Safeway grocery store. The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday that the community college student who had been suspended last October had frequented gaming websites seeking answers to questions about why he couldn’t find a job or get a girlfriend.

More than a decade ago, lawmakers like Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., warned that violence in movies and video games could cause violence in life. But graphic imagery and heated rhetoric moved to the political theater long before that. 

Several recent examples have been offered from both sides of the aisle, including President Obama’s quoting from the film “The Untouchables” in which appears the statement, “If they bring a knife, we’ll bring a gun.”

And even before movie references, crosshairs and bull’s eyes, “battlefields” were drawn across campaign and policy landscapes. President Lyndon Johnson’s State of the Union speech called for a figurative “War on Poverty,” a precursor to the Reagan administration’s equally figurative “War on Drugs.”

Slaughter said that while she’s not up to speed on current regulations, the Federal Communications Commission should work to sanction broadcasts that could incite people to violence.

“No one owns the airwaves,” Slaughter said. “They are owned by the people.”

If lawmakers were to seek remedies to quiet distasteful discussion, the so-called Fairness Doctrine is at the top of lists inspiring supporters and alarming opponents.

Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., told National Public Radio said he “came up in a time that the Fairness Doctrine did not allow media outlets to say things about a candidate or a person in public office without giving that person equal time to respond. And I really believe that everybody needs to take a look at where we are pushing things, and may need to take a serious step back and evaluate what’s going on here.”

Brent Bozell, president of the Media Research Center, said any effort to “use the Arizona tragedy as an excuse to criminalize conservative thought through the FCC” will “backfire magnificently.”

“The country is learning that a) there was no conservative ‘hate’ speech that inspired this killer, and b) that this monster wasn’t even a conservative! In the face of those realities, any attempt to tar Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Sarah Palin, the Tea Party, or any other conservative leader as responsible in any way will be met with outrage by the American people. If they bring a knife, we’ll bring a gun — as they say,” Bozell said.

And not every politician may be on board with a hasty turn to bottling up dissenting voices. Delivering a speech Tuesday, Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said media have the power to inspire, motivate and inform. “But they also have the power to inflame and incite. The seething rhetoric has gone too far.”

However, Leahy added, “In a free society, the society that we Americans must always want our country to be, the government should not and must not restrain free expression.”

Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., also suggested Tuesday in a speech at the Center for American Progress that the blame game has no winner.

“The big question wasn’t whose rhetoric was right or wrong, but whether our political conversation was worthy of the confidence and trust of the American people,” he said.

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33rd Kennedy Center Honors a tribute to artists who promote understanding – Examiner.com

The 33rd Annual Kennedy Center Honors, which were held on December 5, 2010, were broadcast on CBS on December 28, 2010. President and First Lady Obama presided over the event honoring  Merle Haggard, Jerry Herman, Bill T. Jones, Paul McCartney & Oprah Winfrey. President Obama opened the ceremony by stating that it was a privilege to recognize the artists who help people understand the human experience.

Attached is a video from the White House, with the statement from the president and from each of the honorees.

Recipients of the 2010 honors are Merle Haggard,  Jerry Herman,  Bill T. Jones, Paul McCartney and Oprah Winfrey. Merle Haggard is a singer and songwriter noted for poetic lyrics and his contributions to Country Music. Jerry Herman is a Tony Awards winning  composer and lyricist whose scores for  Broadway musicals include Mame, Hello Dolly and La Cage aux Folles.   Bill T. Jones is a leading choreographer and director. Kennedy Center Honors air on CBS

The first honoree was Oprah Winfrey, who was given gushing, laudatory statements by Julia Roberts,  John Travolta, Barbara Walters, Chris Rock and Sidney Pointier.  The talk show queen and media mogul seemed to accept the praise as her due. Jennifer Hudson performed ‘I’m Here’ from Oprah’s Broadway musical ‘The Color Purple.’ Oprah Winfrey, who was accompanied by Stedman Graham, is launching her OWN Oprah Winfrey Network on new Year’s Day. Oprah admits to Paul McCartney crush at Kennedy Center Honors

Edward Albee and Claire Danes led the tribute to choreographer Bill T.Jones. Jones entered college as a track star but a dance class taught him to soar. After meeting Arnie Zane the pair formed a dance company that stood the dance world on its head. Only six years after forming the company Zane died as a result of AIDS.  Jones continued on breaking all the rules of dance to create his own. The Bill T. Jones Arnie Zane Dance Company performed for the tribute.

Vince Gill led the tribute to country legend Merle Haggard, calling the musician a man of few words. Willie Nelson narrated a video tribute, explaining Haggard’s penchant for trouble. Haggard was in imprisoned in San Quentin when Johnny Cash caame to sing for the inmates. It was there the Haggard realized that he could find his way with music. At the end of the video a musical tribute was paid when surprise guests loading the stage, including Kris Kristofferson, Miranda Lambert, Brad Paisley, Sheryl Crow, Jamey Johnson and Kid Rock.

Kelsey Grammer emceed the tribute to Tony Award winning composer and lyricist Jerry Herman, whose scores for Broadway musicals include Hello Dolly and La Cage aux Folles. Performing the tribute for Herman were Broadway legends Angela Lansbury, Chita Rivera, Carol Channing, Christine Baranowski, Christine Ebersole, Sutton Foster and Laura Benanti.

Alec Baldwin led the tribute to former Beatle Paul McCartney.  The video film about his life and musical career followed his the musician from his youth in Liverpool, his rise to fame in The Beatles and his rebirth in Wings after The Beatles broke up.  A rousing musical tribute was performed, which McCartney seemed to thoroughly enjoy, as he sometimes sang along with the performers on stage paying the musical tribute.  Performing a medley of McCartney songs were  Gwen Stefani and No Doubt, Steven Tyler, James Tayler, Norah Jones, Dave Grohl and a full choir of singers. Sir Paul McCartney honored at Kennedy Center Honors

The inductees for the 32nd Kennedy Center Honors were:  The honorees included funnyman and producer Mel Brooks, jazz musician Dave Brubeck, opera singer Grace Bumbry, actor Robert DeNiro and rock musician Bruce Springsteen. PIctures of 32nd Kennedy Center Honorees

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Million Dollar Money Drop: Statue of Liberty Trivia shows off lazy Americans – Examiner.com

The last question of the two hour special of ‘Million Dollar Money Drop’ was a question that every American show know. The knowledge of the correct answer shows our allegiance to this great nation and is required knowledge for ever immigrant to know.

Shockingly the two bumbling contestants on the last question of the evening deservingly lost their new found riches on the Statue of Liberty. The question was which hand does the statue of liberty hold the torch? While every American only has two hand, this should have been a serious no-brainer. The right hand holds the torch, the left hand holds the book and the crown is on top of her head (just in case you were wondering.)

Even if you have never seen the Statue of Liberty in person it is an American icon of great proportions. Seeing it in person is extraordinary as well. It is a symbol of our freedom and a beauty of our nation. So  imagine out surprise that not only does the two competitors but also much of the Internet doesn’t know the answer to this simple question.

It really goes to show what people take for granted in the United States. Comfortable in their little tiny villages and unwilling to step out and see how the world works or recognize the sacrifices made for our great land they live in the privilege. Yes, we are talking about anyone who couldn’t easily visualize this statue and give an answer (if you are ill or working, you are excused.)

Believe it or not, most of the lazy Americans born in this country wouldn’t last five minutes as an immigrant taking the test to gain citizenship. They would be tossed out when they refused to respect our American treasures or recite the Bill of Rights.

You know who you are out there. Get on a plane and check out the Statue of Liberty. People died for this country and it’s time to show some serious respect.

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Mark Madoff, son of Bernie Madoff, had it all before dad’s billion-dollar … – New York Daily News

Stephanie Mikesell Madoff, Mark's wife, with their son Nicholas.

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Stephanie Mikesell Madoff, Mark’s wife, with their son Nicholas.

Mark Madoff, the handsome prince of Bernie Madoff‘s ill-gotten kingdom, lived the sweet life before his father’s $65 billion scam imploded.

During one three-month period in 2008, he racked up more than $77,000 chartering private jets to hopscotch around the country.

He vacationed at his $6.5 million, 3.3 acre retreat in Nantucket and a stately farmhouse in tony Greenwich, Conn. The seasoned fly fishermen also frequently planned outdoor excursions.

“Mark loved his lifestyle, loved the fact he could fly on a private jet or walk into Dunhill and spend $200 on an umbrella,” a trader told Vanity Fair in 2009.

His family life seemed just as enviable.

The 46-year-old had been happily married since 2003 to his second wife, Stephanie, a stunning blonde who was a rising star in the fashion industry. The couple had two young children and raised them in an exclusive SoHo building that rocker Jon Bon Jovi also called home.

Mark Madoff seemingly had it all before his dad’s scam was exposed. Handout

At the Madoff firm, where he was an executive known for his charming salesmanship, Mark Madoff loved working closely with his younger brother, Andrew, and his father.

“What makes it fun for all of us is to walk into the office in the morning and see the rest of your family sitting there. That’s a good feeling to have,” Mark Madoff said in an interview in 2000 with Wall Street & Technology.

Left to right: Bernie Madoff, with brother, Peter and sons Andrew and Mark in 1995. GI/BM/Getty

But the high life vanished exactly two years ago Saturday, when he and his brother turned their father in to the feds.

After his dad’s arrest, Mark Madoff and his family became pariahs, and many victims believed he was complicit in the Ponzi scheme.

He and his family suffered death threats. A fusillade of lawsuits – including a $200 million claim by Bernie Madoff’s bankruptcy trustee – has also restricted his spending and movement of finances.

Mark Madoff at work at his father’s company in 2005. GI/BM/Getty

The Madoff stigma became so bad that even his wife turned her back on his family’s name. Last February, she petitioned a Manhattan judge to change her last name to Morgan.

Friends said Mark Madoff buckled under the infamy, withdrawing socially, obsessing over news accounts and fearing the possibility he would be criminally charged one day.

The stress exacerbated a chronic stomach-pain condition and frayed his marriage, according to reports.

Mark Madoff’s good life came to an end with his apparent suicide. Smith for News

On Oct. 15, 2009, NYPD cops searched for Mark Madoff after his wife frantically called to say he went missing and feared for his safety. The couple had argued earlier in the evening, prompting her husband  – who apparently suffered from depression – to take off on his Vespa.

The next morning he returned home, telling cops he had spent the night at a hotel and that he would seek help from his doctor at Weill Cornell Medical Center.

But people who knew Mark Madoff said his father’s disgrace continued to engulf him, leading to his suicide on Saturday.

Bernie Madoff, right, with wife, Ruth, and son Mark. GI/BM/Getty

“The pressure was mounting. The Picard suit, the anniversary. He’s been upset for two years,” a source said. “He’s been trying to move on with his life but he wasn’t successful.”

jfanelli@nydailynews.com

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Miley Cyrus Isn’t Breaking The Law In Bong Video, Experts Say – MTV.com

By now, you’ve probably seen the video of Miley Cyrus allegedly smoking salvia from a bong, and you’re probably wondering whether she might face legal repercussions as a result of the clip. According to organizations on either side of the ongoing war over drug legalization, the answer is no.

“[The video] might be embarrassing to her, but it does not put her in any legal risk,” Keith Stroup, legal counsel at the marijuana advocacy group NORML, told MTV News on Friday (December 10). “At the moment, [salvia] is not illegal in California, so even if she walked out on the street and smoked it in front of police, she couldn’t be arrested. And the video of her smoking isn’t enough to get her in trouble, because there’s no proof she wasn’t smoking tobacco.”

“Salvia is a drug of concern,” said Michael Sanders, a spokesperson for the Drug Enforcement Agency. “We are taking steps to look further into it, but for right now, it is not a schedule-one narcotic.”

Under the Controlled Substance Act, U.S. drug policy assigns narcotics into five different “schedules” — marijuana is a schedule-one drug, as it has “a high potential for abuse … [and] no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States,” cocaine is a schedule two, etc. — which are determined by two federal agencies: the DEA and the Food and Drug Administration. The DEA does not currently list salvia, an herb that, when smoked, provides a powerful psychoactive punch, though several states have made it illegal. In California, where the Cyrus video was allegedly shot, it is illegal to provide salvia to minors; however, it is legal for them to possess it.

Since the Cyrus video was not only allegedly shot in California but was also done so five days after her 18th birthday (according to TMZ), the pop star wasn’t breaking any laws. Though, as Stroup put it, all of that may change soon.

“Until recently, [salvia] was perfectly legal, frankly because no one paid attention to it. It’s only after a little attention was paid to it in the media that states begin passing legislation about it,” he said. “Drug policy in this country is, by a large part, based on a social response or a political response, but the bottom line is, they don’t want people getting high.”

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Feds block workers from WikiLeaks, mirror sites – CNET (blog)

U.S. government scientists are being blocked from accessing WikiLeaks’ Web sites for fear it will “contaminate” their computers, CNET has learned.

Starting last week, Department of Energy installations began barring access to WikiLeaks and its myriad of mirror sites, which have been disclosing confidential State Department documents on a daily basis.

“Sandia has blocked the site and its mirrors,” said Stephanie Holinka, a spokeswoman at Sandia National Laboratories’ Albuquerque headquarters. A spokesman for Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility in Newport News, Va., confirmed it’s also “blocking access to WikiLeaks and its mirror sites.”

Mark Leininger, Fermilab’s computer security manager, wrote in an internal newsletter that WikiLeaks’ Web site was being blocked because workers at the Batavia, Ill.-based lab could be at risk if they view classified information without being specifically approved for it.

“There is some risk to you as an individual of being involved in an investigation if you view or possess classified information,” Leininger warned. He did not respond to questions from CNET about how frequently the list of blocked Web sites would be updated and whether newspaper Web sites would be blocked too.

It’s in part a symbolic move–after all, government employees can read the cables at home or watch them discussed on the evening news–and also one spurred by security regulations that were never designed to deal with an era of torrential Internet leaks. (An executive order that President Obama signed last year says that “classified information shall not be declassified automatically as a result of any unauthorized disclosure.”)

The move to cordon off WikiLeaks comes as a noose appears to be tightening around the neck of editor Julian Assange, who is the target of an arrest warrant issued today in the U.K., according to a BBC report. He could appear in a U.K. court tomorrow, according to the Guardian. In addition, WikiLeaks’ finances are being systematically attacked, with the Swiss authorities shutting down one of Assange’s bank accounts and PayPal permanently restricting the account used by the group.

In the week or so, U.S. politicians have stepped up their criticism of the document-sharing site, which has posted only about 1,000 of 251,000 State Department dispatches it says it has and has shifted to the WikiLeaks.ch domain.

“I think the man is a high-tech terrorist,” Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said yesterday, referring to Assange. “He has done enormous damage to our country.” And the incoming chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee wants WikiLeaks listed as a “terrorist” organization.

The Library of Congress, part of the legislative branch, acknowledged blocking WikiLeaks in a blog post on Friday. Also that day, the White House’s Office of Management and Budget told federal workers not to visit WikiLeaks’ Web site–but stopped short at ordering that it, or its mirror sites, be blocked.

“That guidance did not advise agencies to block WikiLeaks or other Web sites on government computer systems,” an OMB spokeswoman told CNET today.

That decision appears to have originated with the Department of Energy, which sent a memo to its installations saying: “Any document that is on an Internet Web site that is purported to be classified cannot be downloaded to an unclassified computer system without contaminating the unclassified computer system.”

Fermilab’s Leininger echoed this, telling employees that, “if someone downloaded a classified document to a computer on the Fermilab network, our network would be considered ‘contaminated.’”

A spokesman for Oak Ridge National Laboratory, which was once a key part of the Manhattan Project, said the lab has computers that are approved to store classified information. WikiLeaks is being blocked, the spokesman said, because workers “should not be accessing classified information” on unapproved machines.

Melinda Lee, a representative of the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, which is operated by Stanford University, said: “Viewing classified material using SLAC’s computing infrastructure is a violation of government security regulations and would jeopardize our status as an unclassified research laboratory.”

Lee did not immediately respond to questions about whether employees were also restricted from accessing news articles and blogs that summarized or excerpted classified material.

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