Settlement in NY lawsuit over NBC's 'Predator'

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NEW YORK (AP) NBC Universal has settled a $105 million lawsuit
brought by a woman who claimed ”Dateline NBC: To Catch A
Predator” led her brother to kill himself after camera crews and
police officers showed up at his home in a televised sex sting.

”The matter has been amicably resolved to the satisfaction of
both parties,” said a statement released by both sides.

Terms of the agreement were not disclosed.

Patricia Conradt’s lawsuit had claimed her brother, an assistant
prosecutor in suburban Dallas, fatally shot himself after he was
accused of engaging in a sexually explicit online chat with an
adult posing as a 13-year-old boy.

The lawsuit claimed NBC ”steamrolled” authorities to arrest
Louis William Conradt Jr. after telling police he failed to show up
at a sting operation 35 miles away.

NBC was working with the activist group Perverted Justice on the
sting, in which people impersonating children established online
chats with men and tried to lure them to a house, where they were
met by TV cameras and police.

In February, a federal judge issued a scathing ruling in the
case, saying a jury might conclude the network ”crossed the line
from responsible journalism to irresponsible and reckless intrusion
into law enforcement.”

U.S. District Judge Denny Chin said the lawsuit contained
sufficient facts to make it plausible that the suicide was
foreseeable, that police had a duty to protect Conradt from killing
himself and that the officers and NBC acted with deliberate
indifference.

New episodes of ”To Catch A Predator” ended in December, with
the future of the series uncertain.

”Right now we are working on other investigative stories
focusing on national security and the economy,” NBC spokeswoman
Jenny Tartikoff said in an e-mail. ”If we do more, we want to make
sure we are complementing past investigations not just repeating
them.”

Redskin Sean Taylor's Murder Investigation Snags Fifth Suspect

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5th person charged in Redskins safety’s killing

MIAMI (AP) — Prosecutors in Miami say a fifth person has been charged in the slaying of Washington Redskins star Sean Taylor.

Miami-Dade County State Attorney’s Office spokesman Ed Griffith says Wednesday that 16-year-old Timothy Brown is charged with first-degree murder under a sealed warrant.

Taylor died of massive blood loss after he was shot at his Miami-area home during a botched robbery in November. The 24-year-old safety had made the Pro Bowl in 2006 and 2007.

Brown is being held in Lee County. It’s not immediately known when he’ll be transferred to Miami-Dade County to face the charge.

Trial for the other four suspects is set for Aug. 25. Prosecutors have said they will not seek the death penalty.

YouTube – April 28, 2008 Bill Maher O V E R T I M E

401k, ABC, ABC News, Abrams, Addington, AEI, Al Qaeda, Ari Fleisher, Ashcroft, bailout, Baker Botts, Banks, Bechtel, Beltway Groupthink, Beltway Journalism, Bin Laden, Blackwater, Bozell, Bremer, Britain, Broadcatching, Brown and Root, Buffett, Bush, Bush Apologists, Byron York, California, Campbell Brown, Carlyle Group, Charlie Gibson, Chevy Chase Club, Children, CIA, Coalition Provisional Authority, Cokie Roberts, Colin Powell, Condi Rice, Consensus Journalism, Conservatism, Constitution, Corn, Credit, Credit Default Swaps, Dan Rather, Dan Senor, Dana Perino, David Brooks, David Iglesias, Debates, Democrats, Dick Cheney, District Of Corruption, Dow Jones, Duke Zeiberts, Equity Market, Evolution, FBI, Feith, Finance, FISA, Fournier, Framing, Freepers, George Stephanopoulos, George Tenet, George W. Bush, George Will, Global Warming, Gonzales, Gonzalez, Gootube, Grey, Grover Nordquist, Guantanamo, Guns, Habeas Corpus, Halliburton, Hannity, Healthcare, Hedge Funds, Hillary, Hume, Immigration, Iran, Iraq, Jeff Gannon, Jeff Guckert, Joe Biden, Joe Klein, John Yoo, Joseph Wilson, Judith Miller, Justice Department, K Street, Karen Hughes, Karl Rove, Katrina, Kellog, Kerry, Kristol, Lee Atwater, Lehman. AIG, Libby, Limbaugh, Lobbyists, Luntz, Malkin, Maria Bartiromo, Mary Mapes, Matalin, Matt Cooper, Matt Drudge, Media Landscape, Medved, Meet The Press, Money Market, Moonbats, New York, New York Herald Sun, New York Times, NSA, O'Reilly, Obama, Olbermann, Patriot Act, Perle, PNAC, Politico, Politics, Politics Rundown, Poverty, Prager, Republic_Party, Retail Investors, Rich Lowry, Rick Sanchez, Right-Wing Conspiracy, Robert Luskin, Robert Novak, Roger Ailes, Rosie, Rumsfeld, Rupert Murdoch, Saddam, Sarah Palin, Scott McClellan, Shiite, Smerconish, Soldiers, Stock Market, Sunni, Surge, Taxes, terrorism, The Palm, The Plank, Tim Russert, Tony snow, Torture, Tullycast, Valerie Plame, Vandenheuvel, veterans, Viveca Novak, Wall Street, War Criminals, Washington D.C., Watergate, web 2.0, William Kristol, Wingnuttia, Wolfowitz, Youtube

YouTube – April 28, 2008 Bill Maher O V E R T I M E



Grateful Dead's archives have final resting place at UC-Santa Cruz – San Jose Mercury News

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SAN JOSE MERCURY NEWS (YES!)

The Grateful Dead’s long strange trip through American popular culture is landing in a library at the University of California-Santa Cruz, preserved for future generations of study by scholars and stoners.

Three decades worth of archival materials – from business records to stage backdrops – have been donated by the band to the school’s McHenry Library, where a room called Dead Central is being dedicated to a beloved band dubbed “the largest unofficial religion in the world.”

UC-Santa Cruz Chancellor George Blumenthal joined Dead drummer Mickey Hart and guitarist and singer Bob Weir in a buoyant press conference Thursday at San Francisco’s aging Fillmore Auditorium, the site of 51 Dead concerts. In honor of the event, Blumenthal was given a tie-dyed T-shirt.

“All of this stuff doesn’t belong to us – it belongs to the culture that spawned us,” Weir said. “It seemed like getting it into a campus archive, with access for the people in the community that gave rise to it, was the right thing to do.”

The seaside campus was the “most enthusiastic” and “organized,” which helped it edge out two heavyweight suitors, Stanford and UC-Berkeley, Weir said.

“Santa Cruz is the seat of the neo-bohemian culture that we’re a facet of,” Weir said. “So there could not have been a more cozy place for this collection to land.”

The gift does not contain any of the band’s vast musical recordings; those are stored in a Southern California vault belonging to producer Rhino Entertainment. The university said it will work with Rhino on how to access musical material.

But it does contain valuable artifacts that document the band’s ascendance into one of California’s most durable and influential musical phenomena. Currently held in a 2,000-square-foot San Rafael warehouse, the collection includes the Dead’s first recording contract, life-size skeletons of band members used in the 1987 “Touch of Grey” video, and an estimated 50,000 to 75,000 fan letters from around the world, many decorated with elaborate art.

“What you’ll see is our conversation with the people who loved us, and vice versa,” Hart said.

A blue-chip team including several Silicon Valley-based fans – among them venture capitalist and musician Roger McNamee – will oversee a $2 million fundraising campaign for the archive. Seagate Technology CEO Bill Watkins has volunteered technical support.

Formal academics never meant much to the Dead.

But fans say their image-rich lyrics about such themes as love, trust and rebirth are worthy of scholarship. The song “Box of Rain” is as central to Deadheads as Allen Ginsberg’s “Howl” was to Beats and T.S. Eliot’s “The Waste Land” was to Modernists.

For musicologists, there is value in studying how the Dead’s repertoire updated many of the nation’s older musical traditions, from bluegrass to jazz, said Fred Lieberman, a UC-Santa Cruz music professor. “They were the quintessential American band,” said Lieberman, who first proposed the archive idea to Hart, with whom he has collaborated on three books. This will boost the university’s scholarship on American culture, he said.

However, the gift may do little to help the university shed its image as a mecca of hacky sack and patchouli oil – and, in fact, is likely to attract a tie-dyed pilgrimage. In recent years, the school has worked to refocus attention on its ambitious scientific research efforts. It has even cracked down on its traditional April marijuana smoke-in at Porter Meadow, barring non-students and overnight guests.

Campus librarians said they would welcome Deadheads to the grassy lawn outside the library.

The library already has the vast and eclectic archive of the late Aptos composer Lou Harrison, and was looking to expand.

“This is the first step toward having a library that is a destination for scholars interested in studying an important aspect of America’s vernacular music,” he said.

The survival of the archives through turbulent decades is due to a devoted staffer named Eileen Law, who was hired in 1972 to take care of the Deadheads and who worked with the band for the next 34 years.

Among other jobs, she tended the mail that flooded into a San Rafael post office box.

“Pretty soon I found myself being the keeper of everything – press clips, posters, all their vinyl. I kept getting more and more stuff,” she said. “Everything I could collect, I did.”

At the press conference, UC-Santa Cruz librarians assured Law, who is unemployed, that she’ll play an important role in the cataloging of the material.

“I had faith that something good would someday happen to it,” Law said, grinning.

Fans rejoiced at the news of the gift – and instantly began offering their own contributions to the collection.

“Can we submit material?” one fan asked on the band’s Web site. “I have my own stash – much of it from the parking lot scene, ’83-’95.”

IF YOU’RE INTERESTED

See library.ucsc.edu/speccoll/GD_archive.html or e-mail grateful@ucsc.edu.


Contact Lisa M. Krieger at lkrieger@mercurynews.com or (408) 920-5565.
SJMN

" These Are Not The Drugs You're Looking For "

9/11, Barack Obama, Election 2008, Hillary Clinton, Politics, Tullycast


April 18, 2008 | Bill Maher | Part One

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Catholic University, Hosting Pope, Keeps Dissenters Off Campus

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BLOOMBERG

By Nadine Elsibai

April 17 (Bloomberg) — Pope Benedict XVI will get the
royal treatment today when he speaks at Catholic University of
America in Washington. Actor Stanley Tucci got the hook.

Tucci, the star of “Big Night,” was prevented from
taking part in a university forum in 2004 because he favors
abortion rights. He’s not the only one who’s been turned away.
A contractor with the school bookstore in 2003 canceled a talk
by Eleanor Holmes Norton, Washington’s delegate to Congress,
and the university president initially delayed funding a campus
NAACP chapter, both over the abortion issue.

“I don’t think it’s necessary to offer everybody who
believes whatever, especially what is contrary to the church,
the pride of place that a platform on this campus provides,”
said Father David O’Connell, the school’s president.

That policy will make the 121-year-old institution, the
only Vatican-chartered graduate and research center in the
U.S., a fitting host for Benedict XVI, who as cardinal was in
charge of enforcing church doctrine.

Benedict, 81, making his first visit as pope to the U.S.,
will offer a message of encouragement to the heads of the more
than 200 U.S. Catholic colleges and universities and
superintendents of the 195 dioceses in his 5 p.m. address. His
talk follows a Mass he will say at the Washington Nationals
baseball stadium.

While he’s expected to face some protesters during his
Washington visit, including supporters of victims of sexual
abuse by clergymen, many of the 6,400 students at Catholic
University are offering only enthusiasm.

Procession for Pontiff

Three nights ago, 300 students held a candlelight
procession through the campus, with stops to say the rosary, in
honor of the pontiff. The Campus Ministry sold baseball shirts
with his name in block letters across the back to raise money
for its missions. Students in the architectural program
designed the chair he’ll use during his talk.

University officials say that while students are free to
debate contentious issues in the classroom, such views
shouldn’t be highlighted elsewhere.

That policy was evident in October 2004. O’Connell halted
plans to invite Tucci to speak at a seminar on the Italian
cinema, because of his ties to Planned Parenthood, a group that
favors abortion rights, said Victor Nakas, a university
spokesman.

Contrary Positions

“Catholic institutions should not honor people who take
prominent, public positions diametrically opposed to the
Catholic Church’s teachings,” Nakas said.

In February 2003, the scheduled appearance by Norton was
canceled by the bookstore contractor after students complained
about her pro-abortion stance, Nakas said.

In the spring of 2004, students filed a petition seeking a
campus chapter of the NAACP. The request wasn’t honored until
O’Connell met with the civil rights organization’s then-
president, Kweisi Mfume, to get assurances that the students
wouldn’t have to follow the group’s national policy endorsing
abortion rights, Nakas said.

Jennifer Plante, Tucci’s publicist, said her client was
unavailable to comment. Tamainia Davis, a spokeswoman for
Norton, and Robert McIntyre, a spokesman for the NAACP, didn’t
immediately provide comment.

“Catholic colleges here are more challenged by the
American notions of academic freedom, which tends to be very
absolutist,” said Patrick Reilly, president of the Cardinal
Newman Society
, a group dedicated to strengthening Catholic
identity at church-affiliated schools.

Georgetown’s Different

That hasn’t stopped Georgetown University, a private
college in Washington run by the Jesuits, from allowing groups
and speakers whose positions don’t always follow the church.
H*yas for Choice, a gay rights and pro-abortion group named
after the school’s Hoyas nickname, recently hosted “Choice
Week” on campus.

Catholic University’s strict environment is relatively
new, said Mark Judge, a 1990 graduate. There was “a lot of
hedonism in the 1980s,” he said.

The “president is an orthodox guy who is faithful to the
magisterium,” said Judge, a Potomac, Maryland, freelance
writer. “Whereas before, that kind of orthodoxy was not
tolerated, now it’s celebrated.”

To contact the reporter on this story:
Nadine Elsibai in Washington at
nelsibai@bloomberg.net.

Bloomberg.com: Exclusive

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Bill Maher's Final March Show a Doozie

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Nationals won’t let Lo Duca catch Bush’s first pitch; President Loudly Booed

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mosaic.jpg

The President was LOUDLY booed….

Think Progress

On Sunday, President Bush will be throwing out the ceremonial first pitch for the Washington Nationals. The team’s starting catcher Paul Lo Duca — who was mentioned 37 times in the Mitchell Report — was originally expected to catch Bush’s pitch, despite the President’s repeated denunciations of performance-enhancing drugs. But the Washington Post now reports that Lo Duca is being replaced by Manager Manny Acta:

The White House said it played no role in determining who would catch the pitch.

“Whatever the decision the Nationals make is up to them,” White House spokesman Tony Fratto said by telephone Thursday. “In no way did we, or would we, raise any issues.”

Lo Duca said after Thursday’s final Grapefruit League game that he had no animosity about the situation. […]

Lo Duca declined to speculate as to whether his role in the Mitchell report had anything to do with the decision.

Play Ball! Fans learn to play concession waiting game

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BTF

photo9.jpg

JS Online
Heh.
Just got back from Wrigley this weekend.

I THINK Sam Adams was $5.50 at Murphys across the street. And the post-game St Pauli Girl was $5.50 at Sluggers, I believe.
Only got one or two brews inside the Friendly Confines on Fri/Sat, Id have guessed it was $5.50 for 12 ounces of Bud?
But dont hold me to it – its not like you walk away if the price doesnt seem right, lol.
Hmm, I think Shea is $8.25. Maybe thats 16 ounces?
At these prices, not sure anyone becomes enough of a regular to have it memorized.

The Wrigley kosher dog was $4, the regular kind $3.50. I noticed that.