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To: long-gone who wrote (79127)11/5/2001 7:46:36 AM
From: d:oug  Respond to of 116753
 
New Free & unLimited Power Source - non toxic non pollute

... whose power supply is fueled by the screams
of human children visited in the night by... squadron
of scaremeisters who bottle the squeals...

'Monsters, Inc.' Tramples Box Office Rivals

By Dean Goodman

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "Monsters, Inc.," the latest family
cartoon from Walt Disney Co. and Pixar Animation Studios
Inc., scored a monstrous opening, scaring up $63.5 million
in ticket sales in its first three days, according to studio
estimates issued on Sunday.

... ranked as the best cartoon opening of all time
and as a company record for Disney...

"Monsters, Inc." revolves around a civilization of colorful critters
whose power supply is fueled by the screams of human children
visited in the night by a "Top Gun"-like squadron of scaremeisters
who bottle the squeals...

Copyright 2001 Reuters Limited.



To: long-gone who wrote (79127)11/5/2001 1:50:37 PM
From: Alex  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 116753
 
Thieves try to steal gold under rubble
By Philip Delves Broughton in New York
(Filed: 02/11/2001)

EVIDENCE of a daring but failed heist from vaults beneath the collapsed World Trade Centre was revealed by police yesterday as workers removed gold and silver valued at £159 million.

Scorch marks around the basement door to the vaults suggested thieves had tried to break in to steal the precious metals, belonging to the Bank of Nova Scotia.

The bank denied there was any heist attempt, but police insisted that at some time during the past fortnight, a blowtorch and crowbar had been used on the vault's entrance. After the discovery, a video camera was set up to monitor the area.

Given the difficulty of getting on to the site and down to the vault, it is suspected the attempt was an inside job.

Hundreds of construction and relief workers are working on the World Trade Centre site.

The bullion was not the only valuable hoard buried beneath the twin towers. There were also caches of drugs seized by federal agents, boxes of FBI evidence - and thousands of Godiva chocolates.

portal.telegraph.co.uk