OT: Bush swings into action!



 Religions > Atheism > OT: Bush swings into action!

LINK TO THIS PAGE  


rating :  0   |  0


  Page 1 of 1

1

 
Topic: Religions > Atheism
User: "Mark K. Bilbo"
Date: 07 Sep 2005 09:56:08 PM
Object: OT: Bush swings into action!
"Under the command of President Bush's two senior political advisers, the
White House rolled out a plan this weekend to contain the political damage
from the administration's response to Hurricane Katrina."
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/05/national/nationalspecial/05bush.html
--
Mark K. Bilbo
--------------------------------------------------
"We're angry, Mr. President, and we'll be angry long
after our beloved city and surrounding parishes have
been pumped dry. Our people deserved rescuing.
Many who could have been were not. That's to the
government's shame."
http://makeashorterlink.com/?F2D511CBB
.

User: "JTEM"

Title: Re: Bush swings into action! 08 Sep 2005 02:41:15 PM
"Mark K. Bilbo" <alt-atheism@org.webmaster> wrote

"Under the command of President Bush's two senior political advisers, the
White House rolled out a plan this weekend to contain the political damage
from the administration's response to Hurricane Katrina."

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/05/national/nationalspecial/05bush.html

Quite frankly, I don't blame them.
Even as someone who hates Bush's spoiled, worthless butt, I found
myself worried that his distaster here -- given the magnitude of it all --
could genuinely threaten political stability.
And I'm not talking "Bush's job security," I'm taking wide spread
rioting & a breakdown of authority.
Bush may yet achieve this, but it looks a lot less likely at this point
than it did even Saturday.

--
Mark K. Bilbo
--------------------------------------------------
"We're angry, Mr. President, and we'll be angry long
after our beloved city and surrounding parishes have
been pumped dry. Our people deserved rescuing.
Many who could have been were not. That's to the
government's shame."

http://makeashorterlink.com/?F2D511CBB

.

User: "Olrik"

Title: Re: OT: Bush swings into action! 07 Sep 2005 10:14:07 PM
Mark K. Bilbo wrote:

"Under the command of President Bush's two senior political advisers, the
White House rolled out a plan this weekend to contain the political damage
from the administration's response to Hurricane Katrina."

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/05/national/nationalspecial/05bush.html

I've read your subject line as :
"OT: Bush swigs into action!"
Makes sense!
--
Olrik
aa #1981
Qualified SMASH member
EAC Chief Food Inspector, Bacon Division
.
User: "Mark K. Bilbo"

Title: Re: OT: Bush swings into action! 07 Sep 2005 10:27:20 PM
In <70OTe.101959$Wa6.1100771@weber.videotron.net>, Olrik
<olrik666@yahoo_BACON!_.com> wrote:

Mark K. Bilbo wrote:

"Under the command of President Bush's two senior political advisers,
the White House rolled out a plan this weekend to contain the political
damage from the administration's response to Hurricane Katrina."

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/05/national/nationalspecial/05bush.html


I've read your subject line as :

"OT: Bush swigs into action!"

Makes sense!

It would explain a great many things. Especially this:
http://www.bobharris.com/content/view/637/1/
--
Mark K. Bilbo
--------------------------------------------------
"We're angry, Mr. President, and we'll be angry long
after our beloved city and surrounding parishes have
been pumped dry. Our people deserved rescuing.
Many who could have been were not. That's to the
government's shame."
http://makeashorterlink.com/?F2D511CBB
.
User: "Olrik"

Title: Re: OT: Bush swings into action! 08 Sep 2005 12:18:40 AM
Mark K. Bilbo wrote:

In <70OTe.101959$Wa6.1100771@weber.videotron.net>, Olrik
<olrik666@yahoo_BACON!_.com> wrote:


Mark K. Bilbo wrote:


"Under the command of President Bush's two senior political advisers,
the White House rolled out a plan this weekend to contain the political
damage from the administration's response to Hurricane Katrina."

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/05/national/nationalspecial/05bush.html


I've read your subject line as :

"OT: Bush swigs into action!"

Makes sense!



It would explain a great many things. Especially this:

http://www.bobharris.com/content/view/637/1/

Well, the red ones are "parishes", the rest are "perishes"...
--
Olrik
aa #1981
Qualified SMASH member
EAC Chief Food Inspector, Bacon Division
.



User: "stoney"

Title: Re: OT: Bush swings into action! 15 Sep 2005 02:20:59 PM
On Wed, 07 Sep 2005 21:56:08 -0500, "Mark K. Bilbo"
<alt-atheism@org.webmaster> wrote:


"Under the command of President Bush's two senior political advisers, the
White House rolled out a plan this weekend to contain the political damage
from the administration's response to Hurricane Katrina."

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/05/national/nationalspecial/05bush.html

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/blog/2005/09/06/BL2005090600864_pf.html
Dealing With Political Disaster
By Dan Froomkin
Special to washingtonpost.com
Tuesday, September 6, 2005; 1:21 PM
President Bush somehow missed the significance of what was happening
on the Gulf Coast last week as he and his political guru, Karl Rove,
flitted between Texas and California and, finally, Washington.
But now, facing what is clearly a full-scale political disaster, Rove
and a handful of other masterful political operatives have gone into
overdrive. They are back in campaign mode.
This campaign is to salvage Bush's reputation.
Like previous Rove operations, it calls for multiple appearances by
the president in controlled environments in which he can appear
leader-like. It calls for extensive use of Air Force One and a massive
deployment of spinners.
It doesn't necessarily include any change in policy. It certainly
doesn't include any admission of error.
It utilizes the classic Rovian tactic of attacking critics rather than
defending against their criticism -- and of throwing up chaff to
muddle the issue and throw the press off the scent.
It calls for public expressions of outrage over the politicization of
the issue and of those who would play the "blame game." While at the
same time, it is utterly political in nature and heavily reliant on
shifting the blame elsewhere.
But in some ways, this post-Katrina campaign poses Bush's aides with
unprecedented challenges.
The problem -- an achingly slow federal response to what has turned
out to be one of the greatest natural disasters this country has ever
faced -- can be traced at least in part to one of the Bush White
House's most defining characteristics: The protective bubble within
which the president operates.
Bush's aides intentionally keep him mentally and physically aloof from
any ugliness -- political or otherwise. It lets them keep tight
control over the presidential imagery and stay on message.
But inside his bubble, Bush first failed to recognize what was
becoming clear to almost anyone watching the news: That Americans
needed help. And in his two meticulously staged visits to the Gulf
Coast on Friday and Monday, it is precisely because Bush was kept so
far away from dissension or mess that he appeared so out of touch.
He cracked jokes on Friday, including one about his drinking days in
New Orleans, but has yet to confront the true horror of the situation
so widely seen on TV. He has yet to acknowledge the disgrace of a
major American city being rendered uninhabitable on his watch. He has
yet to come face to face with people left to suffer for days in
hellish conditions and explain to them why their government failed
them. And he has yet to demonstrate the strength that Americans
require from their president in a time of crisis.
This crisis finds the president looking impotent at best, incompetent
at worst. And there is an element of whining to Bush's refusal to
shoulder his responsibility -- especially should the press continue to
make it clear how intensely he and his top aides are trying to pass
the buck.
The men behind Bush's bubble are clearly hoping that their tried and
true methods will serve them well yet again and that over time, Bush's
reputation will recover.
But with every body removed from the attics of New Orleans over the
coming weeks, America will remember the colossal failure of government
to protect its people.
The Overviews
Here's Tim Russert talking to Matt Lauer on NBC's "Today Show" this
morning: "Eventually, Matt, there has to be some level of
accountability," Russert said. "Something terrible happened here. The
fact is state, local and federal government did not protect its
people. It's why governments were created. . . .
"Will Katrina and the stumbling of the federal government define his
second term? That's why the president has to be bold and assertive in
trying to correct that impression."
Newsweek asks: "What went wrong? Just about everything. How the system
failed is a tangled story, but the basic narrative is becoming
clearer: hesitancy, bureaucratic rivalries, failures of leadership
from city hall to the White House and epically bad luck combined to
create a morass. . . .
"Bush's many critics will say that the president was disengaged, on
vacation, distracted by Iraq and insensitive to the needs of poor
black people. The White House blames the magnitude of the storm
itself, patchy information on the ground and a confused chain of
command, according to a senior Bush aide who requests anonymity in
order to speak freely about internal administration discussions. The
truth probably lies somewhere in between. . . . Still, we expect more
from a president."
Matthew Cooper writes in Time magazine about Bush's second trip to the
disaster zone: "It was better than his first on Friday. He didn't
offer any untenable defenses of the federal response and he didn't say
anything too off key like he did last time when he vowed to rebuild
Mississippi Sen. Trent Lott's home and fondly recalled his partying
days in New Orleans. . . .
"Still, his visit studiously avoided the hardest-hit areas of Katrina
and the itinerary all but guaranteed that he'd be met with friendly
audiences. The displaced persons he met at the Bethany World Church
were well cared for and for the most part grateful for their
surroundings. In Poplarville, Mississippi, Bush toured a middle class
neighborhood where the damage seemed minimal. Homes were intact,
although many pine trees were felled. But most seemed to have hit
lawns and carports rather than causing real structural damage to
homes. . . .
"Much of Bush's presidency has been built around keeping him away from
unfriendly audiences. His campaign rallies were carefully screened and
so are his policy events where he chews the fat about issues like
Social Security. But that instinct surely can't be serving him well at
a time when the country feels like a collective primal scream over
seeing their countrymen left suffering."
Dan Balz writes in The Washington Post: "The first week of September
2005 likely will be remembered as one of the most troubled weeks of
George W. Bush's presidency, a time in which natural disaster combined
with bureaucratic bungling in ways that threatened to inundate an
administration already on the defensive.
"Even before Hurricane Katrina ravaged the Gulf Coast last Monday,
Bush was buffeted by public dissatisfaction over the war in Iraq and
consumer outrage over rising gasoline prices. But the federal
government's widely criticized response to the hurricane's devastation
in New Orleans and elsewhere turned a challenging environment into one
that is potentially overwhelming. . . .
"Public opinion appears to have been shaped considerably by the
partisan polarization that long has defined attitudes toward Bush. In
part, Bush may be reaping some of the consequences of a governing
style that has favored confrontation over conciliation, of appealing
first and foremost to his conservative base rather than the country as
a whole."
Ronald Brownstein writes in the Los Angeles Times: "The natural
instinct of any administration is to circle the wagons when hit with
the sort of criticism buffeting the White House over the federal
government's response to Hurricane Katrina.
"President Bush is probably even more resistant than most of his
predecessors to admitting error or reexamining decisions. . . .
"But the national interest demands that the president now rise above
that defensive crouch. After a week of despair, suffering and
terrifying chaos in New Orleans, this is a moment for the president to
be knocking heads, demanding answers and imposing changes throughout
the federal government."
Todd S. Purdum writes in the New York Times: "Perhaps not since
Richard M. Nixon faced Vietnam-era tumult abroad and at home has an
American president had to meet quite the combination of foreign war,
domestic tribulations and political division that President Bush now
confronts, from the Persian Gulf to the Gulf Coast to Capitol Hill."
In USA Today, Judy Keen and Richard Benedetto have an account from a
White House insider suggesting that Bush, after initially being
patient, is now angry. Note, however, the utter lack of sourcing:
"Bush's patience with federal hurricane relief efforts evaporated last
week when he learned that thousands had been stuck for days in the New
Orleans Convention Center without food or water. By Saturday morning,
when he and other officials met in the White House situation room for
an update, the president was still steaming. He had seen the disaster
in person and watched horrific scenes on TV. There was talk around the
table that if this disaster was a dress rehearsal for response to a
terrorist attack or other national security crisis, the federal
government failed the test."
An example of the president's loss of patience: "Bush skipped his
usual weekend biking outings and went to a Red Cross operations center
in Washington on Sunday. His trip Monday was meant to underscore his
concern. He'll visit again."
Keen and Benedetto also write: "In a flurry of e-mail exchanges late
Saturday night when they learned about Chief Justice William
Rehnquist's death, President Bush's top advisers debated -- after
their most difficult week since 9/11 -- what calamity might be next."
The Political Campaign
Adam Nagourney and Anne E. Kornblut write in the New York Times:
"Under the command of President Bush's two senior political advisers,
the White House rolled out a plan this weekend to contain the
political damage from the administration's response to Hurricane
Katrina.
"It orchestrated visits by cabinet members to the region, leading up
to an extraordinary return visit by Mr. Bush planned for Monday,
directed administration officials not to respond to attacks from
Democrats on the relief efforts, and sought to move the blame for the
slow response to Louisiana state officials, according to Republicans
familiar with the White House plan.
"The effort is being directed by Mr. Bush's chief political adviser,
Karl Rove, and his communications director, Dan Bartlett."
What took so long?
Some Republicans told the Times "that the normally nimble White House
political operation had fallen short in part because the president and
his aides were scattered outside Washington on vacation, leaving no
one obviously in charge at a time of great disruption. Mr. Rove and
Mr. Bush were in Texas, while Vice President ***** Cheney was at his
Wyoming ranch.
"Mr. Bush's communications director, Nicolle Devenish, was married
this weekend in Greece, and a number of Mr. Bush's political advisers
-- including Ken Mehlman, the Republican National Committee chairman
-- attended the wedding."
As Nagourney and Kornblut explain, Rove's job one is "to shift the
blame away from the White House and toward officials of New Orleans
and Louisiana who, as it happens, are Democrats."
That started on Saturday.
Manuel Roig-Franzia and Spencer Hsu wrote in Sunday's Washington Post:
"Bush, who has been criticized, even by supporters, for the delayed
response to the disaster, used his weekly radio address to put
responsibility for the failure on lower levels of government. The
magnitude of the crisis 'has created tremendous problems that have
strained state and local capabilities,' he said. 'The result is that
many of our citizens simply are not getting the help they need,
especially in New Orleans. And that is unacceptable.' "
One "senior Bush official" went so far as to assert that Louisiana
Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco still had not declared a state of
emergency as of Saturday -- a charge so inaccurate that The Post was
forced to run a correction.
Elisabeth Bumiller and Adam Nagourney wrote in Sunday's New York
Times: "In a sign of the mounting anxiety at the White House, Mr. Bush
made a rare Saturday appearance in the Rose Garden before live
television cameras. . . .
"As Mr. Bush spoke, Vice President ***** Cheney and Karl Rove, the
president's senior political adviser, listened on the sidelines, as
did Dan Bartlett, the counselor to the president and Mr. Bush's
overseer of communications strategy. Their presence underscored how
seriously the White House is reacting to the political crisis it
faces."
Jim VandeHei wrote in Sunday's Washington Post: "Louisiana officials
pushed back hard against the White House yesterday, sharply
criticizing President Bush for offering a tentative and insufficient
response to the obliteration of New Orleans and then trying to shift
the blame to the state and local governments.
"Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) accused Bush of failing to fund efforts to
fortify the levee protecting New Orleans before Hurricane Katrina hit,
and of failing to send troops, supplies and other assistance quickly
enough in Katrina's aftermath. 'Would the president please stop taking
photo-ops, and please come and see what I'm trying to show him?'
Landrieu asked on ABC's 'This Week.' She threatened to 'punch' Bush or
anyone else who criticizes the response of the local sheriffs, one day
after administration officials blamed state and local authorities for
missteps in relief and rescue efforts."
Scott Shane writes for the New York Times: "As the Bush administration
tried to show a more forceful effort to help the victims of Hurricane
Katrina, government officials on Sunday escalated their criticism and
sniping over who was to blame for the problems plaguing the initial
response. . . .
" 'We wanted soldiers, helicopters, food and water,' said Denise
Bottcher, press secretary for Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco of
Louisiana. 'They wanted to negotiate an organizational chart.' "
Busy Labor Day
Bush made three public appearances in the Gulf Coast area yesterday --
all inland, far from the worst damage.
Here are Bush's remarks at a shelter at Bethany World Church in Baton
Rouge; at an emergency operations center in Baton Rouge, and while
visiting with residents in Poplarville, Miss.
"I understand. I understand the damage. I understand the devastation.
I understand the destruction. I understand how long it's going to
take. And we're with you. That's what I want you to know," he told the
residents of Poplarville.
Will Lester writes for the Associated Press: "Since his return to
Washington last week, Bush hasn't gone a day without a public event
devoted to the storm and its devastation. . . .
"During a stop at Bethany World Prayer Center in Baton Rouge, several
people ran up to meet Bush as he and first lady Laura Bush wandered
around the room. But just as many hung back and looked on.
" 'I need answers,' said Mildred Brown, who has been at the center
since Tuesday with her husband, mother-in-law and cousin. 'I'm not
interested in hand-shaking. I'm not interested in photo ops.' "
Nicole Bode, Paul H.B. Shin and Tracy Connor write in the New York
Daily News: "Wayne Johnson, 40, who sought shelter at Bethany with 30
members of his extended family, said he shook the President's hand.
But he was unable to shake the feeling that New Orleans had been
forsaken by the feds at its darkest hour.
" 'They should have had all forces roll in Tuesday night. A lot of
people felt betrayed. Once the hurricane hit, it was like, 'You're on
your own.' "
Bush's "choice of an inland destination didn't sit well with the newly
homeless along the coastline, where entire neighborhoods were washed
away.
" 'If you see Bush, tell him to stop by because I'd like to tell him a
few things,' said Elsie Hutto, 70, whose Gulfport, Miss., home was
ruined."
Elisabeth Bumiller and Clyde Haberman write in the New York Times:
"Scott McClellan, the White House press secretary, said Mr. Bush did
not go to New Orleans yesterday because he had visited it on Friday.
On that visit, however, he did not go to the Superdome or the
convention center, where tens of thousands of largely poor and black
victims had been desperate for food and water for days, and some older
evacuees had died in their wheelchairs. Mr. Bush did speak at the New
Orleans airport and visit the repair work under way at the 17th Street
Canal, where he met with workers, some of whom had lost their homes.
"Mr. McClellan also said Mr. Bush steered clear of New Orleans
yesterday because he did not want to disrupt continuing relief
efforts."
Photo Op Friday
So did the president disrupt relief efforts on his Friday trip? And
were they scrambled to make pretty pictures for the press?
From a statement by Sen. Landrieu about Bush's trip to New Orleans on
Friday: "[P]erhaps the greatest disappointment stands at the breached
17th Street levee. Touring this critical site yesterday with the
President, I saw what I believed to be a real and significant effort
to get a handle on a major cause of this catastrophe. Flying over this
critical spot again this morning, less than 24 hours later, it became
apparent that yesterday we witnessed a hastily prepared stage set for
a Presidential photo opportunity; and the desperately needed resources
we saw were this morning reduced to a single, lonely piece of
equipment."
And Michelle Krupa writes in the New Orleans Times-Picayune: "Three
tons of food ready for delivery by air to refugees in St. Bernard
Parish and on Algiers Point sat on the Crescent City Connection bridge
Friday afternoon as air traffic was halted because of President Bush's
visit to New Orleans, officials said."
Today's Calendar
More White House events on storm relief are planned for today,
including meetings with Cabinet secretaries and representatives of
volunteer organizations.
John D. McKinnon and Joi Preciphs write in the Wall Street Journal:
"Even as it acknowledged that many poor, mostly black residents are
feared to have died in the storm and its aftermath, the Bush
administration was scheduling a cabinet meeting for today to map out
the federal government's long-term strategy for restoring victims'
shattered communities and lives, a senior White House aide said."
Bush spoke to the cameras after his 10 a.m. Cabinet meeting, where
among other things he announced that he is sending Vice President
Cheney down to the Gulf Coast to report back on progress.
He is to make a statement this afternoon in the Rose Garden about
efforts to help students displaced by the hurricane, and later on
meets with congressional leaders in the Oval Office.
Biloxi Blues
Here is some CNN video from Bush's visit to Biloxi.
Bush strides up to two African American women, who are sisters.
Hovering nearby is a white guy wearing shades and shorts.
With the cameras rolling, Bush hugs the two women, one of whom starts
sobbing.
Here's a partial transcript:
Bush to women: "There's a Salvation Army center that I want to, that
I'll tell you where it is, and they'll get you some help. I'm sorry .
.. . They'll help you. . . . "
Woman 1: "I came here looking for clothes. . . . "
Bush: "They'll get you some clothes, at the Salvation Army center. . .
.. "
Woman 1: "We don't have anything. . . . "
Bush: "I understand. . . . Do you know where the center is, that I'm
talking to you about?"
Guy with shades: "There's no center there, sir, it's a truck."
Bush: "There's trucks?"
Guy: "There's a school, a school about two miles away. . . . "
Bush: "But isn't there a Salvation center down there?"
Guy: "No that's wiped out. . . . "
Bush: "A temporary center?"
Guy: "No sir they've got a truck there, for food."
Bush: "That's what I'm saying, for food and water."
Bush then turns to the woman who's been saying how she needs clothes
and tells her: "You need food and water."
Roberts Watch
Here is the text of Bush's announcement of his nomination of John
Roberts to be chief justice of the United States.
Ron Fournier writes for the Associated Press: "President Bush chose
the path of least resistance in nominating John Roberts as chief
justice, acting with unusual haste as the war in Iraq and Hurricane
Katrina sap his political strength. He was the safest choice Bush
could make."
Bush had initially nominated Roberts to succeed Justice Sandra Day
O'Connor, but made the switch less than 36 hours after the death of
Chief Justice William Rehnquist.
Peter Baker writes in the Washington Post: "In elevating Roberts, Bush
chose the candidate most likely to be confirmed in short order by the
Senate, which was poised to ratify the appeals court judge for
O'Connor's seat."
Baker notes that Roberts, "at age 50, would be the youngest chief
justice since John Marshall was appointed in 1801, potentially giving
him decades to shape the court's direction. . . .
"But in shifting Roberts to the center chair, Bush now must find
someone else to replace O'Connor, in some ways an even more
consequential choice because she cast the swing vote on issues such as
affirmative action, abortion and the death penalty for many years. . .
..
"Bush always had Roberts in mind for the next chief justice, aides
said yesterday."
Richard W. Stevenson writes in the New York Times: "In choosing Judge
Roberts to be chief justice at a sensitive political time, Mr. Bush
avoided the fiery ideological fight that would have been ignited had
he chosen to elevate Justice Antonin Scalia, a favorite of many
conservatives, or turned to a sitting federal judge with a clearer and
more extensive conservative record of opinions on social issues than
Judge Roberts has. . . .
"Having essentially moved to swap one reliable conservative for
another in the chief justice's seat, the president now faces what is
likely to be a much more intense battle to replace Justice O'Connor, a
swing voter on abortion and other contentious issues. But the
political climate Mr. Bush faces now is very different from the one in
July, when he first moved to fill Justice O'Connor's seat."
Barbara Bush Watch
Bill Hutchinson writes in the New York Daily News: "To President
Bush's mother, everything is turning out hunky-dory for the New
Orleans evacuees who lost everything."
Editor and Publisher heard Mrs. Bush on NPR's Marketplace saying: "And
so many of the people in the arena here, you know, were
underprivileged anyway, so this -- this (she chuckles slightly) is
working very well for them."
Flag Watch
Bush ordered flags to half-staff on Sunday twice over.
This order lowers flags until Sept. 20 in honor of the victims of
Hurricane Katrina.
This order lowers flags until Sept. 13 as a mark of respect for Chief
Justice Rehnquist.
Karl Rove Watch
Lori Montgomery writes in The Washington Post that Rove "is not
legally entitled to the homestead deduction and property tax cap he's
been getting on his Palisades home for the past 3 1/2 years.
"This week, the D.C. tax collector was alerted to the problem. And
Rove agreed to reimburse the District for an estimated $3,400 in back
taxes, city officials said. But now some Lone Star officials also are
wondering about the place Rove calls home. . . .
"[A]s far as the locals know, the couple have never actually lived in
either of two tiny rental cottages Rove claims as his residence on
Texas voter registration rolls."
© 2005 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive
--
Contempt of Congress meter reading-offscale.
Hello, theocracy with a fundamentalist US Supreme
Court who will ensure church and state are joined
at the hip like clergy and altar boys.
America 1776-Jan 2001 RIP
"As democracy is perfected, the office of president
represents, more and more closely, the inner soul
of the people. On some great and glorious day the
plain folks of the land will reach their heart's
desire at last and the White House will be adorned
by a downright moron." --- H.L. Mencken (1880 - 1956)
Religion is the original war crime.
-Michelle Malkin (Feb 26, 2005)
.


  Page 1 of 1

1

 


Related Articles
 

NEWER

pg.3585     pg.2749     pg.2106     pg.1612     pg.1232     pg.940     pg.716     pg.544     pg.412     pg.311     pg.234     pg.175     pg.130     pg.96     pg.70     pg.50     pg.35     pg.24     pg.16     pg.10     pg.6     pg.3     pg.1

OLDER