On the eve of a trip to Jordan to meet Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki of Iraq, President Bush blamed Al Qaeda for the latest wave of sectarian violence.
The new Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman education building at MoMA — a taut composition of floating planes and elegant lines — has a cool, self-confident air.
Men who repeatedly lose weight and gain it back are raising their risk of gallstones, according to a large study published this week in the Archives of Internal Medicine. The findings confirm those of a similar study in women and suggest that "weight cycling" should join rapid weight loss and obesity as risk factors for gallstone disease.
Let's start with Who Really Cares: The Surprising Truth About Compassionate Conservatism: America's Charity Divide; Who Gives, Who Doesn't, and Why It Matters, by Arthur Brooks of Syracuse University's Maxwell School. Brooks, a political scientist who grew up in Seattle in what he says was a liberal home, examined the data and came up with a conclusion that he found unlikely enough that he went back and checked the data again: Conservatives give more to charity than liberals. As he explains, it's a little more complicated than that. Fact 1 is that Americans give a lot to charity:
Let's start with Who Really Cares: The Surprising Truth About Compassionate Conservatism: America's Charity Divide; Who Gives, Who Doesn't, and Why It Matters, by Arthur Brooks of Syracuse University's Maxwell School. Brooks, a political scientist who grew up in Seattle in what he says was a liberal home, examined the data and came up with a conclusion that he found unlikely enough that he went back and checked the data again: Conservatives give more to charity than liberals. As he explains, it's a little more complicated than that. Fact 1 is that Americans give a lot to charity:
AP - A federal judge struck down President Bush's authority to designate groups as terrorists, saying his post-Sept. 11 executive order was unconstitutionally vague, according to a ruling released Tuesday.
AP - Under intense pressure to change course, President Bush on Tuesday rejected suggestions Iraq has fallen into civil war and vowed not to pull U.S. troops out "until the mission is complete."
AP - U.S. soldiers fought with suspected insurgents using a building as a safe house in Ramadi on Tuesday, killing one Iraqi man and five females, ranging in age from an infant to teenagers, the U.S. military said.
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg met Tuesday with the family of a man shot and killed by police in an incident that could lead to a federal investigation. Sean Bell died hours before he was to be married to the mother of his two children. Community leaders have demanded to know why police fired as many as 50 rounds at Bell and two friends.
President Bush today vowed again not to support removal of U.S. troops before the mission in Iraq is complete. "We can accept nothing less than victory for our children and our grandchildren," Bush said. He blamed sectarian violence on al Qaeda in Iraq for stirring up trouble between Iraq's Shiite majority and the Sunnis favored by Saddam Hussein.