Oklahoma 86, Duke 71
They play the winner of the UConn-Tennessee game that, as of initial posting, has not yet started. UConn is undefeated this year.
Kentucky wants to wage war on casino riverboats
Be it resolved by the House of Representatives of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Kentucky:Section 1. The House of Representatives does hereby encourage the formation of the Kentucky Navy and subsequently immediately encourages the purchase and armament of one particularly effective submarine, namely, the USS Louisville 688 VLS Class Submarine, to patrol the portion of the Ohio River under the jurisdiction of the Commonwealth to engage and destroy any casino riverboats that the submarine may encounter.
Section 2. The House of Representatives does hereby authorize the notification of the casino riverboat consulate of this Resolution and impending whoopin' so that they may remove their casino vessels to friendlier waters.
(fron Politech)
In search of Teddy Roosevelt
The alignment of the political parties along ideological lines has also created a bloc of independent voters who aren't thrilled with either party's platform. Ross Perot and John McCain supporters and other "disaffected" voters dislike both the Republicans' coziness with big business and the Democrats' lack of mettle. One reason for all the TR talk, then, is a wish to reach this independent center, once occupied in part by liberal Republicans, by appropriating Roosevelt's willingness to stand up [to] today's too-powerful trusts while adopting a muscular language of virtue. Those who can pull off this trick in the coming months and years may win more than the battle for TR's legacy. They may get themselves elected.
Bush spends solar research money on printing
Despite blacking out ridiculous amounts of information that obviously did not relate to national security, the documents already showed that the Oil industry wrote major sections of the Energy Plan, word-for-word. That's a Republican hallmark going back to the Reagan and Gingrich eras, where lobbyists were invited to Capitol Hill to decide how much their industries should be regulated. Those of us paying the bills were not invited. True to form, as Slate put it in this article, "Both Cheney and Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham refused to meet with NRDC and related green groups, at best whisking them off to lower-level staffers. By contrast, as the New York Times reported yesterday, the most powerful doors were almost always open to anyone whose hands were dripping with oil."
Today we learn that not only did the Oil industry write the policy, and that the environmental groups the administration said were "heard equally" were shut out, but also that while Bush was calling for research in renewable energy to be cut by 50% he was using that program's own budge to pay for printing his Oil-written plan! Nearly $140,000 of money supposed to be used for solar or wind research was spent to print 10,000 copies of the oil-favoring plan, prepare presentation material to sell it, and to send a Bush aide to Alaska to lobby for drilling in ANWAR.
Any guesses as to what other hypocrisy the administration blacked out to avoid looking like the tools of the oil industry that they are? It's like several cartoons said in the 2000 campaign: to the GOP, a "diversified ticket" is having the heads of two oil companies instead of just one.