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Wednesday, January 24
by
Roland, the Gunslinger
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 10:38 PM EST
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 10:26 PM EST
A survey released today by Prince & Associates in collaboration with wealth consultant Hannah Grove found that 70% of today’s multimillionaires said being wealthy gave them “better sex.” (You can request a free copy via email here.) A majority also said wealth gave them “more adventurous and exotic” sex lives. The survey polled nearly 600 men and women with net worths of more than $30 million and a mean net worth of $89 million. While not scientific, the survey is large for such a wealthy group and offers a rare glimpse of the sex lives of today’s rich. The survey polled men and women who were the financial “principals,” meaning they were the primary decision makers in their households.
by
Pistol Pete
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 06:05 PM EST
![]() I plan to spend the entirety of 2007 with our troops at war, until sickness, wounds or worse send me home, or the military tires of my presence and catapults me over the wire. Having spent most of 2005 in
by
Roland, the Gunslinger
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 05:07 PM EST
Air Force space programs, badly tarnished by serious technical and financial troubles throughout the 1990s, are in the midst of a far-reaching comeback. Even Air Force critics concede that the service largely has overcome the sorts of acquisition woes that sent the service’s major space programs spiraling off course into huge delays and cost overruns. Today, the space community has put together a string of noteworthy successes. Top civilian and uniformed officials claim that the nation’s military space capabilities are probably at a historic peak, though the public is mostly unaware of this.
by
Roland, the Gunslinger
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 05:01 PM EST
The arrest and charging of a group of former black militants Tuesday for the 1971 slaying of a San Francisco police sergeant ends decades of frustration for investigators who say the men were soldiers in a five-year war on law enforcement in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
by
Roland, the Gunslinger
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 04:32 PM EST
by
Roland, the Gunslinger
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 04:24 PM EST
Windows Vista is not even fully out the door, but
by
Roland, the Gunslinger
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 03:38 PM EST
A smiling couple arrived bearing a bouquet of roses on the doorstep of the chief executive of Dresdner Bank. As the banker, Jürgen Ponto, turned to call for a vase, he was shot five times through the flowers by a woman terrorist.
by
Roland, the Gunslinger
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 03:30 PM EST
That's what Lt. Gen. David Petraeus told the Senate Armed Services Committee this morning. It needs to be underlined and it is up the Commander-in-Chief to bolster national will moving forward. That's what the troops repeatedly and candidly told us on our embed trip, too. It's not just about stopping the violence in
by
Roland, the Gunslinger
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 03:19 PM EST
A man who stabbed his wife seven times, then knifed their infant daughter, told a Quebec Court hearing yesterday he regretted the assaults and blamed his actions on a drug problem. The man, whose name cannot be published to protect his child's identity, attacked his wife last February in their The man pleaded guilty in December to two counts of aggravated assault, rather than stand trial for attempted murder. The couple are Muslim.
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 03:12 PM EST
If you ask us, and people often do, the beer belly gets a bad rap. What could be better than a spherical expression of your love for beer, peeking out from under your shirt? We think this was summed up best a by a t-shirt we once saw that said "When you have a tool like mine, you have to build a shed over it." And since the beer belly is a gift from nature, we all knew it wouldn't take long for man to synthesize it. Enter The Beerbelly.
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 02:35 PM EST
A sign outside Soldier Stadium on Sunday before the New Orleans Saints played the Chicago Bears for the NFC championship.
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 02:29 PM EST
Steve Huling, former owner of a West Seattle car dealership that police say bilked a man out of about $100,000, reads a statement before handing two checks for the stolen amount to King County Senior Deputy Prosecutor Lynn Prunhuber, foreground. His wife Sharon is in background.
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 01:18 PM EST
To the surprise of very few, Senator John F. Kerry plans to announce today that he is bowing out of the 2008 presidential race...
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 12:46 PM EST
A Piscataquis County, Maine Resident ended up in the hospital after "coming out of the closet" about his bestial passion for animals and his life as a zoophile. Philip Buble, 44 years old, was attacked and beaten with a crowbar by his 71 year old father while taking a shower in 1999 and had to be hospitalized due to injuries.
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 12:14 PM EST
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 11:28 AM EST
A family in Pinellas County, Fla., whose son was put into a large "body sock" by teachers as punishment, is considering suing the school board after an investigation found the sack was used appropriately on the boy.
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 11:18 AM EST
Do you believe in love at first sight, or should I walk by again? Would you like Gin and Platonic, or Scotch and Sofa? When God said, “Let there be woman,” he created you.
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 11:08 AM EST
Dakota Fanning At a festival that features several films with sexual content, including full male nudity and a documentary about bestiality, a southern Gothic tale that includes the rape of a young girl is causing the biggest stir. "Hounddog" is the story of Lewellen, a girl played by 12-year-old Dakota Fanning, who is growing up in the 1960s South. She is a free- spirit obsessed with Elvis Presley and has little supervision by her abusive father and alcoholic grandmother.
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 11:01 AM EST
Rep. Jan Jones, R-Alpharetta, talks at her seat in the House in Atlanta, in this Wednesday, Jan. 10, 2007 file photo. Legislation that would allow the suburbs to split away and form their own county was introduced by members of the Georgia Legislature's Republican majority this month on the first day of their annual session. 'The only way to fix Fulton County is to dismantle Fulton County,' said state Rep. Jan Jones, the Milton plan's chief sponsor. 'It's too large, and certainly too dysfunctional, to truly be considered local government.'
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 10:49 AM EST
Newly-elected Congresswoman Michelle Bachmann got quite a bit of face time with President Bush after his State of the Union Speech Tuesday night.
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 10:38 AM EST
Connecticut Building Implosion The Veterans Memorial Coliseum in New Haven, Connecticut, was brought down Saturday in a thunderous implosion. The 35-year-old arena, which hosted concerts by Elvis Presley and Frank Sinatra, was razed to make way for redevelopment.
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 10:07 AM EST
Ask David Cota, who spent months training his Indian ringneck parakeet A.J. to use a tiny putter to sink putts on a miniature green. The 5-inch-tall bird has become an Internet video star. "It doesn't look all that tough nowadays, but try to get a a bird to hold a little stick basically in its beak. The first time, he snapped it right in half," Cota said.
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 09:51 AM EST
Which counts more: nature or nurture? It’s the age-old question, oft debated by eccentric millionaires in Philadelphia as they “trade the places” of employees to see whether the ability to rule the pork-belly market is learned or innate. The answer?
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 09:44 AM EST
Hundreds of chickens have been found dead in eastern China — and a court has ruled that the cause of death was the screaming of a 4-year-old boy who in turn had been scared by a barking dog, state media reported Wednesday.
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 08:44 AM EST
"Many years ago, son, there was this country that was called Iran. Today the land that country occupied is now called the Great Persian Desert..." PAPER: N KOREA HELPING IRAN WITH NUCLEAR TESTING...
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 08:31 AM EST
Hundreds of illegal immigrants arrested over the past week in one of the biggest U.S. immigration stings have already been deported, but some are being held for possible criminal prosecution. Federal authorities announced Tuesday the results of a weeklong series of raids in the Los Angeles metropolitan area that targeted illegal immigrants who had previously been deported for crimes or defied final deportation orders.
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 08:26 AM EST
"And don't get me started on the whole skinhead thing. What idiot came up with that idea? When everybody's bald, you can't even tell who's blond. Back in the '70s, we combed our hair neatly, wore starched, pressed brown shirts, and polished our jackboots until you could use them as mirrors. We always looked presentable, even when beating up Mexican migrant workers or sending hate mail to Jewish leaders."
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 08:00 AM EST
Except for The Departed, the Best Picture nominees have been seen by about as many people as saw the Screech sex tape. Look at the "best original screenplay" nominees - proof positive that the only way to be nominated is to write something nobody wants to see!
by
The Bartender
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 07:56 AM EST
by
Roland, the Gunslinger
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 07:00 AM EST
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon has been on the job for less than a month, but with a 26-word announcement Friday he did more to reform that international body than anything ever attempted by predecessor Kofi Annan. "The Secretary-General will call for an urgent, system wide and external inquiry into all activities done around the globe by the U.N. funds and programs." So said Mr. Ban's spokesman after the Secretary-General met with Ad Melkert, associate administrator of the United Nations Development Program. The key word here is "external." Concerns about corruption in the U.N.'s Oil for Food program bubbled for years before Mr. Annan finally agreed to set up the independent Volcker Commission.
by
Roland, the Gunslinger
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 06:00 AM EST
Thousands of migrant workers from the Caucasus, Central Asia and China are leaving Russia as the government institutes tough new measures aimed at cracking down on illegal immigration. Campaigners against illegal immigration are welcoming the measures, saying low-paid migrants were distorting the job market and taking work from Russian citizens. But critics say the moves are ill-advised because they will drive up retail prices and create a labor shortage that could hurt Russia's booming economy.
by
Roland, the Gunslinger
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 05:00 AM EST
The Justice Department should administer a polygraph test to former National Security Adviser Sandy Berger to find out what documents he took from the National Archives in 2002 and 2003, Rep. Tom Davis wrote in a letter to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales dated Monday. Davis, ranking Republican on the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, is leading a group of 18 lawmakers who say the Justice Department has been "remarkably incurious" about Berger's decision to remove documents relating to the Sept. 11 commission's inquiry into his role in helping prevent terror attacks during the Clinton administration.
by
Roland, the Gunslinger
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 02:21 AM EST
The Wildcrafted Sarsaparilla Root (Smilax officinalis, S. Medica, S. ornate, S. glabra, S. aristolochiaefolia, S. japicanga, S. febrifuga, S. regelii ) has been very successful in reversing or controlling the symptoms of many debilitating health conditions.
by
Roland, the Gunslinger
on Wed 24 Jan 2007 02:08 AM EST
The slaves endured physical, psychological abuse and forced-conversion according to the CSI report. |
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