By now, it's a media ritual. Whenever the U.S. government raises the alert level for terrorism -- as when officials announced the orange code for "high risk" on May 20 -- local, regional and national news stories assess the dangers and report on what's being done to protect us. We're kept well-informed about how worried to be at any particular time. But all that media churning includes remarkably little that has any practical utility.

Presumably, the agencies that are supposed to help safeguard the public don't need to get their directives via network news or the morning paper. As for the rest of us, the publicity is very close to useless -- unless we're supposed to believe that feeling anxious makes us safer or looking sideways at strangers will enhance our security.

Americans could be much better protected if journalists found other uses for some of that ink and air time. For instance, a lot of lives would be saved if news outlets did more to encourage people to stop smoking and avoid excessive alcohol intake. For that matter, public health could benefit greatly if media did a better job of confronting
The Ohio State University's entirely student-run musical theater group, Off the Lake, will present its annual spring musical: Kiss Me, Kate will be held in Hitchcock Hall on the OSU campus (2070 Neil Avenue) on May 29th, 30, and 31st at 8:00pm. Admission is only a canned good, which will later be donated to the Mid-Ohio food bank.

Based around Shakespeare's comedy Taming of the Shrew (the play within the play), Kiss Me, Kate is a lively mix of the old and the new, sure to keep many genres of audiences on the edge of their seats. Ex-lovers Fred Graham, an egotistical producer and the male lead, and Lilli Vanessi, a capricious stage diva, are reunited humorously to produce a musical version of Taming of the Shrew. Further hilarity ensues when two gangsters show up to collect an IOU and wind up on stage.

Featuring a 25-member cast and a 15-piece orchestra, Kiss Me, Kate offers much more than theatrics. The music and dancing of this straight- from-Broadway production are a force to be reckoned with.

Though your body was taken away from us years ago, we want you to know that your spirit lives among us still.

Through our dignity and our pride in our history and our culture, you live.

Through our marches and demonstrations and sacrifices for our people's struggles anywhere and everywhere in the world, you live.

Through our dedication to our children, and our commitment to give them the best, you live.

Through those among us who refuse to be beaten down, and who are willing to pay the ultimate price for our manhood and womanhood and peoplehood, you live.

Through our schools and our centers and our holidays and our children named after you, you live.

Through our desire to live life guided by the highest principles, as you did, you live.

And through our commitment to have our freedom and dignity, fully and completely by paying any price, you live.

We declare, brother, to our friends and to our foes, that every shut eye ain't sleep, every good-bye ain't gone.

Brother, you live among us still.

(c) 1985 Yemi Toure
The endless clash between state power and popular will has always assumed its most vivid contours in the matters of sex, booze and drugs. Particularly in the last case the struggle concerns not merely pleasure but the suppression of pain. The state protects pharmaceutical companies, who enjoy the highest profits in American business. The state persecutes marijuana cultivators and suppliers, and, at the federal level, is trying to crush a nationwide rebellion by those who not only see marijuana as delightful and benign, but as of proven efficacy as a medicine for those for whom pain is a chronic condition.

The rebellion has its many thousands of martyrs, rotting in state and federal prisons. Its most conspicuous victim right now is Ed Rosenthal. Come June 4, Ed Rosenthal will be back in U.S. District Court in San Francisco to hear what sentence U.S. Judge Charles Breyer has decided to impose. Earlier this year, a California jury found him guilty of cultivating marijuana, of maintaining a place to cultivate marijuana and of conspiring with others to cultivate marijuana. He's in his early 50s now, and he's
On Friday, May 16, 2003, Columbus Jobs with Justice participated in one of Columbus' first workers' rights delegations. A group of local labor, religious and community members (including County Commissioner Mary Jo Kilroy, representatives from JwJ, the Central Labor Council, the Catholic Diocese, and a number of labor organizations) visited the corporate offices of the Kroger Corporation to ask for a visit with the president and to present a large signed poster demonstrating community support for truck drivers of Teamsters Local 413, who are in danger of losing their jobs. Kroger, a union shop where cashiers and others are represented by the UFCW, is considering giving the trucking contract to a non-unionized, low-paid owner-operator trucking firm in Texas.

At least 50 workers from Teamsters Local 413 marched with the delegation to the corporate office. Delegates presented their statement to a Kroger executive and made statements about their support for the campaign. After the delegation visit, supporters handbilled at a nearby Kroger store to gain support for the campaign and held signs near the highway to raise
www.theproudliberal.com/slaves.html

You try to tell us that we are free
Free to be slaves of your regime

You try to tell us that we are free
Free to be slaves of your regime

It's mighty funny how the eagle flies
It's time to check the pockets were the eagle hides

It's mighty funny how the eagle flies
It's time to check the pockets were the eagle hides

All the lies you keep trying to sell
Eat your words and go to hell

Even though we're not free we won't be used for your dirty schemes
Even though we're not free you can't take away our dignity ,yeah

What they want is a peaceful change
So the pockets of the pharaohs remains the same
They'll declare war as a slick diversion
eliminate the problem continue the perversion

Even though we're not free we won't be used for your dirty schemes
Even though we're not free you can't take away our dignity ,yeah

David Moore
Lyrics and Music
Copyright 2002
As Ohio lurches toward more education cuts to resolve the state’s fiscal crisis, state legislators should be cutting wasteful spending. This means they should even consider cutting failed pet projects that have been coddled by lawmakers.

Limping toward its 7th year of existence, Ohio’s charter school program is one such project. The program has produced no academic return for our investment of state and local taxes, more than $200 million this year. Fiscal conservatives in the House of Representatives scrutinized every line item in the Ohio Department of Education’s budget with a fine toothcomb, yet they refused to even glance at the failed charter school program. With more than $600 million cut from K-12 and public higher education already, this program should be the first place lawmakers look to help balance the budget.

Charter school proponents sold the public a new approach to education. They promised taxpayers that if you ‘forget regulation and red tape, we’ll get results, never you mind how.’

The results are dismal.

Unpopularity of US attack on Iraq notwithstanding, this war will go down in history as recrudescence of dangerous precedent of preemptive strike-- a norm in medieval time when fittest and strong never felt shy of devouring weak on one or other excuse.

However, fallout of this war were immediate for South Asia—home of two third world nuclear powers, India and Pakistan, who have fought three full scale wars in their half a century life, two among exclusively on Kashmir. Subsequently the most outstanding issue among the two countries remains of that of Kashmir--a sparsely populated, Muslim majority sate in northern India.

What now is feared most is that if the stage were set for another round, as it is not very unlikely in the given mood and geo-political setting, it would be nuclear one. That is why people in region or around the world want both countries to sit and talk peace.

BOISE, Idaho -- When last we left the saga of Texas' few living elected Democrats, they had fled the state pursued by minions of the law -- legislators on the lam. These courageous citizens, fleeing vile Republican oppression in their state capital, took refuge at the Holiday Inn in Ardmore, Oklahoma.

Reporters embedded with the law-breaker law-makers in Ardmore say the perps remain unrepentant.

Meanwhile, back at the capitol, mighty was the wrath of the Republicans left holding session without a quorum. Bills died by the dozens as the lawmakers wanted by the law bollixed up the legislative works (bills not passed through second reading as of May 15 die automatically, a bit of legislative process the fleeing Dems cunningly used to their advantage).

Gov. Goodhair Perry, who keeps saying he wants more civility and bipartisanship, denounced the AWOL solons as "cowardly," childish" and "irresponsible." It was a bad day for bipartisanship.

Everyone mourned the death of legislative civility while colorfully cursing the other side. Texas House Speaker Tom Craddick, the
Some politicians are still attempting to use last summer's forest fires for political advantage. Two House committees have approved a harmful anti-forests bill sponsored by Rep. Scott McInnis (Colo.) and Rep. Greg Walden (Ore.) that will provide more help to powerful timber companies than to communities at risk from fires. The bill is expected to go before the full House soon.

Please take a moment to ask your representative to oppose the McInnis-Walden logging bill, misleadingly named the "Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2003." Ask your representative to instead support the alternative sponsored by Rep. George Miller (Calif.).

http://pirg.org/alerts/route.asp?id=11&id4=OHFreep

Among other harmful impacts, the misnamed "Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2003" would eliminate the core of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and allow the Forest Service to conduct large-scale, environmentally damaging logging projects without considering alternatives, including the "no-action"

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