SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Pastimes : Clown-Free Zone... sorry, no clowns allowed -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Les H who wrote (131483)10/27/2001 7:37:35 PM
From: stomper  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 436258
 
I lost a bunch of Fed bookmarks. Does anyone have a link to the Money Velocity chart the Fed posts? TIA.

-dave



To: Les H who wrote (131483)10/27/2001 8:46:30 PM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 436258
 
On same issue - U.S. Incarceration Of Five Israelis Sparks Hard Questions

Why have five young Israelis been
detained for over six weeks in a
maximum-security facility in New
York on charges of minor
immigration violations? Why have
their deportation orders, which were
issued one month ago, not yet been
implemented? Why have the
American authorities not taken note of
the fact that, according to persons
very close to the case, at least one of
the five is on the verge of mental
collapse? These are just some of the
angry questions Jews in Israel are
beginning to ask as more details of
this bizarre case come to light.

The five, at least one of whom has
asked to remain anonymous in order
not to alarm his ill father and other
ailing relatives, were originally
arrested on Sept. 11 on charges
relating to the Bin-Laden terrorist
attacks. After up to 16 hours of
"unpleasant" questioning, the
investigators realized that they had
made a mistake - but decided to keep
the Israelis in jail anyway because
their visas had expired. "The boys
received deportation orders on Sept.
25," Atty. Steve Gordon, the New
York attorney of one of them, said,
"and I admit, I have no explanation as
to why they have not yet been
deported. Nor can I understand why
they are being held in a
maximum-security facility. Either the
U.S. government is not telling us
everything, or else it's true that the
Immigration Service simply does not
have enough manpower to implement
the orders, as they claim."

Meanwhile, however, the five are
suffering greatly. The mother of one
told Arutz-7's Yosef Zalmanson that
she has it from a "first-hand source"
that one of them is in "very dangerous
psychological condition," and that the
others are also suffering. The parents
are in close contact with one another,
and have become, the mother said, a
support group for each other.
"Hopefully, when the boys return, we
will be able to tell the full story of
how we helped each other," she said.
She said that she was not allowed to
communicate with her son during the
six weeks following the arrests.
When told that the Consul-General in
New York had said that they might be
released "next week," she said, "Of
course they *might* be - but there has
been no indication at all that anything
has changed since a month or six
weeks ago. The whole thing is one
big question mark."

"Even the Israeli Consul-General in
New York was allowed to visit only
after asking several times and
receiving a special permit," Katie
Shmuel, the mother of another of the
youths, told Arutz-7's Yosef
Zalmanson yesterday. "He was
allowed to talk to them only in
English, and only from behind a glass
partition. The Consul told me that the
boys are in a bad state and that they
are being held under difficult
conditions." It has since been learned,
however, that some of them were
granted improved conditions two
days ago.

Mrs. Shmuel said that President
Moshe Katzav, New York Mayor
Giuliani and others had attempted to
intervene, but there have been no
results so far. The youths are being
held in the Metropolitan Detention
Center in Brooklyn. When asked if
the local Jewish community had
gotten involved, both mothers said
that they had been in contact with
"someone there" but that they had not
seen results.

A spokesperson for the Israeli
Consulate in New York told Arutz-7
that in the wake of the Sept. 11
attacks, "the Americans now have
different procedures for dealing with
the detention of anyone arrested in
connection with the attacks. Every
single request of ours must go through
the FBI and the State Department's
legal team" - even though the
terrorism charges have long been
dropped. "We are doing as much as
we possibly can on their behalf," she
said.

israelnationalnews.com



To: Les H who wrote (131483)10/28/2001 1:29:18 PM
From: Oblomov  Respond to of 436258
 
Fed targeting stock prices

dailynews.yahoo.com

``It's quite possible that stock values could have fallen more than they already did if interest rates weren't lower,'' Gramlich said.