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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: 10K a day who wrote (228015)2/18/2002 11:43:45 AM
From: Bald Eagle  Respond to of 769670
 
?? To change the subject:
U.S. Missile Defense Engineers Score a Hit in a Missile Test
Wednesday, January 30, 2002

Brit Hume

And now the most absorbing two minutes in television, the latest from the wartime grapevine.

It fell to a little-known Web site to report it first, but it appears that U.S. missile defense engineers have scored a hit in a test in which actually
hitting a target was not even expected. Aviationnow.com says that missile defense agency engineers last Friday were testing a piece of navigation
and control equipment. They took aim at a test target missile that was fired from a missile range facility on the Hawaiian Island of Kauai. The
engineers fired their anti-missile missile from the USS Lake Erie, a ballistic missile test ship, not expecting to actually hit the target, but they hit it
anyway, to their surprise.

California Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, just back from a visit to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, says the prisoners being held there are being
better treated than criminals doing time in some California jails. In fact, Feinstein said that given a choice between Cuba and San Quentin, she'd
take Guantanamo Bay. She also said she agrees with the President that those being held there are dangerous and should not be treated as
prisoners of war.

Robert Altman, the American movie director, who said last week that he finds the Bush administration "disgusting" and the President himself "an
embarrassment," and the American flag "a joke," has issued a clarification. He does not deny the quotes, but says they were "taken out of
context." He described himself as "a proud American and a proud New Yorker who has lived in that great city for 30 years." He does not
explain how that fits with his further statement last week that he would be happy to stay in London for the rest of his life because "There's nothing
in America that I would miss at all."

A high school student in Lubbock, Texas, who wrote a letter to the editor of the local newspaper is claiming in court that the school
superintendent told him he could no longer do that without the school system's approval. The Lubbock Avalanche Journal reports that
16-year-old Justin Latimer says he wrote to the paper to complain that the school band was not allowed to play Amazing Grace, as planned,
during a tribute to the 9/11 victims. After the letter appeared, Latimer said in a lawsuit, the school superintendent forbid him to do it without prior
school approval. The school system has not responded to the lawsuit.

foxnews.com