作者zebra01 (對我很有意義的一首歌)
看板chicken
標題[閒聊] 新雞
時間Thu May 24 03:00:42 2007
【Ptt養雞場】 批踢踢實業坊 看板《chicken》
Name :
新手 (
馬英九) 生日 :
07年
5月
20日 (
少年 3歲)
體:
1077/1078 法:
883/883 攻擊力:
290 敏捷 :
0 知識 :
0
快樂 :
7564 滿意 :
1337 疲勞 :
1082 氣質 :
36 體重 :
11.69
病氣 :
0 乾淨 :
7 食物 :
9 大補丸:
0 藥品 :
12
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很乾淨..快飽死了!.累了..
很快樂..很滿足..
--
轉錄幾篇新聞
最近都好窮 囧>
--
Goodling says she didn't discuss firings with White House
POSTED: 12:15 p.m. EDT, May 23, 2007
Story Highlights
‧ NEW: Monica Goodling denies discussing firings with Karl Rove or Harriet
Miers
‧ Judiciary Committee grants Goodling immunity for testimony
‧ Goodling is only key official who had not testified previously in U.S.
attorney firings
(CNN) -- Attorney General Alberto Gonzales' former White House liaison
testified Wednesday that she never discussed the hiring or firing of U.S.
attorneys with White House officials.
"I did not hold the keys to the kingdom, as some have suggested," said Monica
Goodling, who was senior counsel and White House liaison until resigning in
April.
"To the best of my knowledge, I never had a conversation with Karl Rove or
Harriet Miers while I served at the Department of Justice, and I'm certain I
never spoke to either of them about the hiring or firing of any U.S.
attorney," Goodling said in her opening statement to the House Judiciary
Committee.
The committee is investigating whether the firings of eight U.S. attorneys
was politically motivated and has questioned whether Rove, President Bush's
chief political adviser, and Miers, former White House counsel, were involved.
Goodling initially invoked her Fifth Amendment right to protection from
self-incrimination, but the committee granted her immunity in return for her
testimony.
The Judiciary Committee's chairman, Rep. John Conyers, D-Michigan, said
Goodling "may well have information that will help us with our inquiry," in
opening the hearing Wednesday.
In a hearing last month, Conyers said that Goodling was "apparently involved
in crucial discussions over a two-year period with senior White House aides,
and with other senior Justice officials, in which the termination list was
developed, refined and finalized."
Gonzales' Justice Department has said the attorneys were fired because of
poor job performance, but critics allege the attorneys were fired for
political reasons.
The investigation has led to calls for Gonzales' resignation.
Transcripts from a Judiciary Committee interview with a career Justice
Department attorney released late Tuesday show Goodling sobbing
uncontrollably and at great length in his office when the controversy began
to swirl around her in March.
"She proceeded for the next, it seemed like forever, but it was probably only
about 30 or 45 minutes, to bawl her eyes out and say, 'All I ever wanted to
do was serve this president and this administration and this department,' "
Associate Deputy Attorney General David Margolis said.
"My goal was to try to calm her, so I gave her some advice to calm her --
calm her down, which didn't work," Margolis said.
"I tried to make her laugh, which didn't work, and to give her some personal
advice, which she didn't take."
Margolis said Goodling didn't say what role she had played in the U.S.
attorney firings or offer any specifics during the March 8 meeting.
Deputy blamed Goodling for disputed testimony
Goodling, who resigned from her job last month, also has drawn scrutiny
because she is one of the aides Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty blames
for failing to brief him properly before his February appearance before
Congress, according to her attorney and Conyers.
In that February 6 appearance, McNulty said all but one of the eight U.S.
attorneys who were fired last year were fired for performance reasons.
Prosecutors and their supporters disputed that statement, saying the firings
were perhaps politically motivated.
Congressional investigators hope Goodling can shed light on some of the
lingering questions surrounding the firings: What role did key White House
officials play in determining which U.S. attorneys would be fired? Did they
push for specific names to be added or removed? How was the list of the
prosecutors developed? Were the firings at all prompted by a desire to
interfere with investigations of members of Congress, as some Democrats have
alleged?
Gonzales has denied any of the firings were done for improper reasons.
John Dowd, Goodling's attorney, said his client will testify truthfully and
will answer the questions to the best of her ability.
E-mail: 'We have a senator prob'
Goodling was one of a handful of aides at a key November 27, 2006, meeting in
which the firings were discussed. Numerous e-mails to and from her are among
the internal Justice Department documents related to the controversy that
have been released.
In many of them she discussed the resignation of U.S. Attorney Bud Cummins in
Little Rock, Arkansas -- who was pushed out to make room for Tim Griffin, a
former associate of Rove's -- and the criticism that ensued.
In an e-mail Goodling wrote August 18, 2006, to then-Justice Department Chief
of Staff Kyle Sampson, she said, "We have a senator prob, so while wh is
intent on nominating, scott [Scott Jennings, deputy White House political
director] thinks we may have a confirmation issue."
Separately, e-mails showed she agreed to a request from Jennings to meet with
some New Mexico Republican activists who were upset with the U.S. attorney
there, David Iglesias, who later was added to the list of those to be fired.
Members of the committee are likely to press Goodling on why Iglesias was
fired. His name was added late in the process and only after several members
of Congress, including Republican Sen. Pete Domenici of New Mexico,
complained about his job performance and his failure to bring a public
corruption indictment before the 2006 election.
This month the Justice Department announced Goodling is the focus of an
internal investigation looking into allegations she may have considered
political affiliation during the hiring of career prosecutors, which is
illegal.
From:
http://www.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/05/23/goodling.testimony/index.html
--
Lebanese minister warns militants
Lebanon's defence minister has said Islamist militants entrenched in a
Palestinian refugee camp must surrender or face further military action.
Elias Murr told al-Arabiya TV that the army would not negotiate with "a group
of terrorists and criminals".
Earlier, thousands of people used a lull in fighting between troops and
militants from Fatah al-Islam to flee the Nahr al-Bared camp.
At least 50 soldiers and militants have died. The civilian toll is unknown.
A formal ceasefire has not been declared, and correspondents say the
unofficial truce could break down at any time.
'Two options'
Speaking in an interview with the Arabic satellite TV channel, Mr Murr said
there would be no negotiations with those inside the camp in northern
Lebanon.
"The army will not negotiate with a group of terrorists and criminals."
"Their fate is arrest, and if they resist the army, death."
The minister said more than 50 militants had been killed in fighting at the
camp since Sunday - a figure the militants have disputed.
Mr Murr said those who had survived his troops' bombardment had two options.
"The first one, which we prefer, is that they surrender," he said.
"The other, which we do not like, is military action."
On Monday evening, the Lebanese cabinet authorised the army to step up its
efforts and "end the terrorist phenomenon that is alien to the values and
nature of the Palestinian people".
"Their fate is arrest, and if they resist the army, death."
Lebanese minister Elias Murr
From:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6685475.stm
Little Rock, Arkansas -- who was pushed out to make room for Tim Griffin, a
former associate of Rove's -- and the criticism that ensued.
In an e-mail Goodling wrote August 18, 2006, to then-Justice Department Chief
of Staff Kyle Sampson, she said, "We have a senator prob, so while wh is
intent on nominating, scott [Scott Jennings, deputy White House political
director] thinks we may have a confirmation issue."
Separately, e-mails showed she agreed to a request from Jennings to meet with
some New Mexico Republican activists who were upset with the U.S. attorney
there, David Iglesias, who later was added to the list of those to be fired.
Members of the committee are likely to press Goodling on why Iglesias was
fired. His name was added late in the process and only after several members
of Congress, including Republican Sen. Pete Domenici of New Mexico,
complained about his job performance and his failure to bring a public
corruption indictment before the 2006 election.
This month the Justice Department announced Goodling is the focus of an
internal investigation looking into allegations she may have considered
political affiliation during the hiring of career prosecutors, which is
illegal.
--
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推 NYjeter:一天到晚將程式PO完的錢拿來賭博當然窮 05/24 11:27
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