Home-grown trio kick Victory to top
The News Review:
- Home-grown trio kick Victory to top
- Sept. 11 — Five Years Later
- Wayne St. bead shop fills niche: The owner plans to offer classes in…
- What did we learn from 9/11?
- Don’t fall into terror trap: Pakistan newspaper
- Eastern promise
Home-grown trio kick Victory to top
The Age – Sep 11, 2006
Photo: Getty Images MELBOURNE Victory began its game against the New Zealand Knightswithout any of the “trio from Rio”; only Claudinho, with a latecameo appearance off the bench, played any role in thiscomprehensive 3-0 win over the Kiwis. But they weren’t needed as home-grown heroes Danny Allsopp,Archie Thompson and Kevin Muscat proved that anything Melbourne’snew Samba boys can do, they can do just as well or even better. The conditions were dreadful — driving rain, gloom thatcaused the floodlights to be switched on barely 15 minutes into agame with a lunchtime kick-off, and a heavy, churned up pitch,which had been the venue for a rugby game 36 hours earlier. But that didn’t prevent the resurgent Allsopp, the classyThompson and a measured Muscat — with a header, not his usualstrike from the penalty spot — from notching a flurry of goalsinside the first 35 minutes to set Victory up for a comfortablewin. The win means that Melbourne is now the only team in theA-League with a 100 per cent (three wins from three matches)record. After Queensland Roar’s goalless draw against the CentralCoast Mariners, Victory is two points clear at the top of the tableand has scored eight goals in three games.
Sept. 11 — Five Years Later
Washington Post – Sep 11, 2006
most are state-owned. _______________________Ann Arbor, Mich. : With AQ looking to use "home-grown" terrorists, it seems like we have a perfect opportunity to infiltrate the organization. Do you know if we are trying this?Dana Priest: Well, by definition "home grown" is actually not probably connected to him in a meaningful way. I would think that law enforcement are trying to infiltrate them for other reasons and if they found a connect, then… _______________________Ann Arbor, Mich. : With AQ looking to use "home-grown" terrorists, it seems like we have a perfect opportunity to infiltrate the organization. Do you know if we are trying this?Dana Priest: Well, by definition "home grown" is actually not probably connected to him in a meaningful way. I would think that law enforcement are trying to infiltrate them for other reasons and if they found a connect, then. _______________________Chicago, Ill.
Wayne St. bead shop fills niche: The owner plans to offer classes in…
Free with registration – News-Sentinel – AccessMyLibrary.com – Sep 11, 2006
11–For years, Corene Painter loved to make jewelry but couldn’t find stores selling beads she liked — so she opened her own. Painter, 30, has been the owner of Home.
What did we learn from 9/11?
Pocono Record – Sep 11, 2006
Sometimes bewildering hostility rears its head. But violence is not just a tool of foreign religious ideology. Timothy McVeigh showed us that evil can be home-grown, too. The United States will never be able to control every terrorist group or every potentially violent person. But our government should hold perpetrators responsible while pursuing cordial relations with our allies and respecting the civilian populations of our enemies. We can encourage education and improved standards of living. We have not always done that.
Don’t fall into terror trap: Pakistan newspaper
Hindu – Sep 11, 2006
The Daily Times said as the victims were Muslims, it was possible that Hindu extremist groups were behind the blasts. The newspaper argued that the charged anti-Muslim climate post-Mumbai blasts had set the stage for Malegaon. The newspaper pointed to economic and social backwardness of the Muslim community in India, but said the Indian media was loathe to admit that the “injustices perpetrated by the Indian state against the Muslims” could have pushed home-grown groups to cause the Mumbai blasts. `Hindu extremism’
“The rise of Hindu extremism, which has sought primarily to target Muslims, has unleashed a cycle of violence that has only complicated matters. In the larger context of Pakistan-India relations, Hindu extremists have also cast aspersions on the Indianness of Muslims and consider them as Pakistan’s Trojan horse,” it noted. It emphasised the need to redress the grievances of Muslims in India, and also for a co-operative security framework “between and among States” in order to prevent terrorism from networking. Public perception
The Post said while the Mumbai blasts could not be said to have targeted a specific community, there is no doubt that “Friday’s blasts were targeted solely against the Muslim community.
Eastern promise
Telegraph.co.uk – Sep 11, 2006
The equivalent figures for Surrey are £648,000 and £1,750,000 respectively, and for Berkshire £625,000 and £1,608,000. Constable country may be exceptionally appealing, but the county is not short of chocolate-box pretty locations and market towns such as handsome, medieval Thaxted. Renowned for its music festivals, striking Guild Hall and magnificent parish church, it is a property honeypot, despite being under one of the flight paths of nearby Stansted airport. David Emberson of Mullucks Wells Estate Agents, operating in and around Thaxted, Great Dunmow, Bishop’s Stortford, and Saffron Walden, says: “There are plenty of attractive towns around here, such as Great Dunmow, and villages, such as Great Bardfield and Finchingfield, which have their own church, pubs, schools and local village stores. They all have a good supply of period properties, ranging from pretty thatched cottages to substantial Victorian and Edwardian houses… “In outlying villages you can find a small period cottage needing modernisation for £175,000, while The Old Vicarage in Great Bardfield, which had a guide price of £950,000, has recently gone under offer. “The area boasts more than prettiness and appealing prices. Buyers are attracted by the rich home-grown food – from its oyster beds and smoke houses around Mersea Island and Tollesbury to gourmet jam from Tiptree, with the occasional vineyard thrown in. Many Essex locations have low crime figures and the county is home to some of the best performing schools in the country, including Colchester Grammar school, King Edward VI Grammar School and the County High School for Girls in Chelmsford, as well as a good choice of independent schools. There has to be a downside of course, and from a practical point of view, Essex has never been as well-served for transport as some other counties close to the capital. However, choose the right location and you will find fast links into London to match or surpass those of its rivals. Even those living in the rural idyll of Constable country are just a few miles from direct train links at Colchester or Manningtree.