HomeSubmit LinkSuggest CategoryLatest LinkTop LinksContact Us


LinksSort by: PageRank | Hits | Alphabetical


Latest News

Ohio executes inmate who argued was too fat to die (AP) -

This undated file photo provided by Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction shows Richard Cooey. Lawyers for an Ohio death row inmate who has unsuccessfully argued that his obesity prevents humane lethal injection have filed an appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court to halt Tuesday's execution.   (AP Photo/Department of Rehabilitation and Correction)AP - Ohio executed a 5-foot-7, 267-pound double murderer on Tuesday who argued his obesity made death by lethal injection inhumane.


Stocks fluctuate as profit-taking sets in (AP) -

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Monday Oct. 13, 2008. Wall Street snapped back Monday from last week's devastating losses after major governments announced further steps to support the global banking system, including plans by the U.S. Treasury to buy stocks of some banks.  (AP Photo/Richard Drew)AP - Wall Street fluctuated Tuesday as investors reacted enthusiastically to the U.S. government's plans to spend $250 billion to buy stock in private banks but also collected profits from the previous day's massive advance. The Dow Jones industrial average shifted between modest losses and gains a day after its record 936-point jump.


Rolling Stone ends large format after 4 decades (AP) -

A comparison of Rolling Stone magazine's last issue in its larger format, top, and its shrunken new issue,  New York, Monday Oct. 20 , 2008.  After more than four decades of standing out with an oversized format, the magazine will look like everyone else starting with the Oct. 30 issue out this week. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)AP - Rolling Stone magazine is shrinking with the times.


Government moves again to unclog credit lines (AP) -

President Bush delivers remarks on the economy in the Rose Garden of the  White House in Washington, Tuesday, Oct. 14, 2008. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)AP - President Bush on Tuesday announced a $250 billion plan by the government to directly buy shares in the nation's leading banks, saying the drastic steps were "not intended to take over the free market but to preserve it."


Sen. Clinton says 2nd White House run is unlikely (AP) -

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y. is followed by her husband, former President Bill Clinton, left, while entering a campaign rally in downtown Scranton, Pa., Sunday, Oct. 12, 2008 with Democratic vice presidential candidate, Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del. and his wife Jill Biden. (AP Photo/Jimmy May)AP - Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton puts the chances of her running for president again at near zero — slightly higher than the chances she gives for becoming Senate majority leader or a Supreme Court justice.


 
Host-net