A Message From Lucianne  



Now More Than Ever
Get Your Eagles Up!
Lucianne Tees - in
Black or White
Click to Buy

































   
 
Home Page | Latest Posts | Links | Must Reads | Update Profile | RSS | Contribute
Register | Rules & FAQs | Search | Post | Contact | Logout | Forgot Password


When a Genealogy Hobby
Digs Up Unwanted Secrets

Wall Street Journal, by Sue Shellenbarger

Original Article

Posted By:Drive, 1/17/2013 7:29:42 AM

Amateur genealogists, beware. Researching your ancestry doesn´t always turn up heroes and royalty. It may turn up a felon, a bigamist or another unsavory character. New York filmmaker Heather Quinlan found more than a few skeletons when digging into her ancestors´ closet. Among them: Thomas Fagan, her grandmother´s great-grandfather, who had killed a man during a drunken bar fight in 1868 (reportedly hitting him over the head with a chair in self-defense).

  

Post Reply  

Reply 1 - Posted by: StormCnter, 1/17/2013 7:54:38 AM     (No. 9121668)

I´ve been doing genealogy research for twenty years and the stories I´ve turned up have included some juicy ones. That´s part of the fun, of course. And, yes, like the woman in this story, I´ve debunked some of my family legends. That´s almost always a disappointment.


Reply 2 - Posted by: Fosterdad, 1/17/2013 8:13:15 AM     (No. 9121698)

I know. I´ve been doing some genealogical research and found out that one of my wife´s ancestors owned slaves and another massacred Indians.

When I was a kid I was always told that one of my great-great grandmothers was part Native American. She wasn´t. She was white. Bummer.


   

 

  


 
Reply 3 - Posted by: thelmalou, 1/17/2013 8:13:28 AM     (No. 9121700)

Listen - we can´t help what happened before our time. So some of my ancestors were less than savory characters. I doubt anyone has s sterling family tree.


Reply 4 - Posted by: Proud American, 1/17/2013 9:15:43 AM     (No. 9121801)

Greetings fellow genealogists! I have been at it for nearly 40 years and I love doing it. With the advent of the web it has made the search so much easier. I can say without reservation that genealogists are the most generous and patient people you´ll meet.

I have been astonished at what I have found...and the thread is never ending. The people in my line range from Calvin Coolidge´s butcher, Alexander Graham Bell´s house keeper, a revolutionary war hero, native Americans, shepards and blacksmiths, a minister introduced to his congregation by Cotton Mather, to a bowman for Henry VIII, the exchequer of London, Eleanor of Aquitane, Charlegmane and on and on. Some were wonderous and some were rouges. Most of them lived ordinary lives such as my own but I feel I have a close up view of the history of the world once I find their
names, dates & locations...

In my family we love and honor them all and can´t wait to meet them one fine day!

Proud American in MA


Reply 5 - Posted by: Proud2bninfidel, 1/17/2013 9:28:58 AM     (No. 9121825)

yeah, just ask dirty harry reid about his horse thief ancestor. seems criminal minds run in the family.


Reply 6 - Posted by: gartenfrau, 1/17/2013 9:30:53 AM     (No. 9121826)

I´ve been fortunate in that much of my genealogy was handed to me in books done by other family members. The challenge has been verifying it as true. My mother´s family is fairly boring...germans who came settled in SE Ohio in the 1830´s. My great-grandmother got pregnant by someone in the Swedish royal family and was sent to the US. The baby was adopted by a canadian couple. My Dad´s family came over with the Puritans and I have 3 Rev. War vetrans. Through him I am descended from Magna Carta signers, minor and som major royalty and lots of Puritans. It´ a neat way to learn history.


Reply 7 - Posted by: StormCnter, 1/17/2013 9:31:47 AM     (No. 9121829)

Last post on this subject, although I could discuss it all day.

When you´ve got Texas roots, as half my lines do, there will be renegades. My g-g-g-grandfather, a drunkard and neer-do-well, invaded a central Texas small-town church service (with his gang) to shoot an enemy who was in attendance. The group fired sixteen shots and didn´t hit anyone in the building. The townspeople were so outraged, they lynched them anyway.


   

 

  


 
Reply 8 - Posted by: NorthernDog, 1/17/2013 9:33:47 AM     (No. 9121836)

What´s funny is that researching Obama´s genealogy brings howls of protest and heaps of scorn. It seems that He is the skeleton in the closet.


Reply 9 - Posted by: bob913, 1/17/2013 9:35:51 AM     (No. 9121841)

My ancestor was a guard at the Swedish palace in the 1850´s but left for America suddenly when the King found out who was romancing the Queen... at least that is what I will pass down thru history.

BTW part of the story is true : )


Reply 10 - Posted by: Proud American, 1/17/2013 9:49:29 AM     (No. 9121861)

gartenfrau perhaps our ancestors knew each other during the war!

BTW I forgot to mention that I also found a slave in my lineage - Anna Christian - half native american and half african. I am also decended from Magna Charta signers...I have had a pro look at the work/lineage and it was given the nod of confirmation.

Blessedly I am also related to Dick Chenney! Can you imagine my pride?! Our common ancestor is the minister who was introduced to his flock by Cotton Mather in Massachusetts. The Rev. came from Aberdeen Scotland in the 1600´s.

Looking through my past I do wonder about genetic memory - have any of my fellow genealogists on this site heard of this?




Reply 11 - Posted by: AltaD, 1/17/2013 9:56:06 AM     (No. 9121870)

A few years before my aunt (Mom´s sister) passed away, she told me that one of her daughters paid a genealogist to research the family tree but the information is all wrong. Somewhere along the way the spelling of their last name was altered so the genealogist researched the wrong family.

My aunt said she didn´t have the heart to tell her daughter that she wasted her money and since it wasn´t my secret to tell, I´ve never told my cousins. Which means they´ve passed a stranger´s family tree on to their children and grandchildren.


Reply 12 - Posted by: MissMolly, 1/17/2013 10:17:23 AM     (No. 9121901)

#12, the error will be uncovered if anyone applies for DAR or SAR membership.


   

 



 
Reply 13 - Posted by: woodenleg, 1/17/2013 10:24:02 AM     (No. 9121914)

I´ve always gone on the assumption that my Irish relatives were horse thieves and bootleggers. Never bothered to find out though.


Reply 14 - Posted by: MisterDickens, 1/17/2013 10:24:55 AM     (No. 9121915)

Before my father died, he spent years doing research on our family. I am a nothing burger, descended from nothing burgers.


Reply 15 - Posted by: JHHolliday, 1/17/2013 10:29:05 AM     (No. 9121932)

I have been doing my family´s geneology for 20 years now and it´s always fascinating. One ancestor was the biggest slaveholder in Georgia before ´The War´. Not something to brag about but no guilt either since I wasn´t around then.

When you order a DNA test they also warn you about negative discoveries. There is something known as a ´non-parental event´.

That´s when your family has alway been Smiths and the DNA turns up that you are actually a Jones. Meaning somewhere back in your line there was either an adoption or an extramarital affair. Dig around far enough and you will always find surprises.


Reply 16 - Posted by: Clinger, 1/17/2013 10:31:51 AM     (No. 9121938)

#4, Hiya Cousin! I´m in line for my reparations as a slave decenedent. Bishop plantation in Barbados. You don´t suppose the fact he was Irish will hurt my case do you?


Reply 17 - Posted by: mitzi, 1/17/2013 10:36:28 AM     (No. 9121948)

I can´t imagine what I would consider an "unwanted secret." Everything is just so fascinating to learn about.

I´ve been researching since about 1990, having picked up from my mother´s prior 20 years of research. "We" settled in the U.S. between 1852 (earliest) and 1892 (last).

I have an ancestor who fought in the American Revolution ... as a Hessian. He returned to Germany after the war and died in 1802.

Two collateral ancestors were executed in the 17th century Germany - accused of being witches.

The Germans kept fabulous records (both secular and church records).

We´ve done DNA testing for ancient ancestry and my female line goes back to the Iberian caves during the last Ice Age - 13,000 years ago. When we got our results (2005), I told my mother that it explains why we all liked scribbling with crayons on the wallpaper when we were children!


   

 

  


 
Reply 18 - Posted by: O.S. Banker, 1/17/2013 10:53:14 AM     (No. 9121996)

I have worked extensively on my paternal side of the family. Our surname is from southern Scotland, the Borders commonly known as the Debateable Land. Claimed by both England and Scotland, taxed by both England and Scotland but protected by neither. I was effectively a DMZ so consequently alliances and loyalties extended no further than family and neighbors. We had our own cavalry capable of mounting 3,000 men in the saddle. We raided the English as necessary to survive. One time that the loyalty was extended to the King of Scotland, James V. When he ascended the English throne as James I, he repaid my ancestors by sending a letter of safe conduct inviting them to a hunt. Upon arrival at the Manor, they were siezed and subsequently hung. All 30 of them. At Carlenrig in July of 1530.

For some reason, there is not a whole lot of trust in my family for centralized authority. Hmm?


Reply 19 - Posted by: Proud American, 1/17/2013 11:04:58 AM     (No. 9122020)

Cousin Clinger #17...Who knows? My Irish great grandfather was born May 4, 1844 in Rathgormack County Waterford... reperations? Bah!

I count my blessings and thank God each and every day that in all the thousands of years and generations they were smart enough to get their fannies over here by golly!

I spoke to a licenced genealogist that told me she knows people who have traced....right back to Adam! Now that is commitment. Yes, we all go back to Adam & Eve but these folks track the names & tribes - ya gotta love it!

Nice to meet you cousin!


Reply 20 - Posted by: annie xango, 1/17/2013 11:05:43 AM     (No. 9122024)

I love this thread..fascinating to hear your stories.a cousin has done extensive research ,published a big leather bound book for all of us..he traced that part of the family back to the 11th century..I find that mind boggling.Ancestral village is over 700 years old.


Reply 21 - Posted by: realrep, 1/17/2013 11:30:37 AM     (No. 9122071)

#4 We are also related. Charlemagne is my g(x37)grandfather.
My g-grandparents in England were drunks so my grandfather came to the USA in 1896. He worked in a woolen mill. The fed gov´t sued the woolen mill and the mill closed. The woolen mill buildings are now part of Mystic Seaport Museum.


Reply 22 - Posted by: Proud American, 1/17/2013 11:59:05 AM     (No. 9122161)

Greetings Cousin RealRep #22 have you met our cousin Clinger #17?

What a delight and to think after centuries, thousands of miles, war, famine & disease our family has come together again on the best website in the most delightful salon hosted by the incomparable Miss Lucianne Goldberg!

So this means that we have ancestors in common who were Knights Templar (some buried in Jerusalem) picts and Vikings!

Say, I am in MA just so ya know. Good to know all of us on this thread are keeping the stories & legends of our people alive and well for the next generation to learn from.


   

 



 
Reply 23 - Posted by: comstock, 1/17/2013 12:15:49 PM     (No. 9122210)

A cousin discovered our Great Grandfather was a Catholic Priest when he fathered our paternal grandfather. As was common in the day, our grandfather carried the mother´s name. So our family name is bogus... Oh, well.


Reply 24 - Posted by: columba, 1/17/2013 1:35:52 PM     (No. 9122381)

In Obama´s AD 2013 No one will be able to identify a person´s father or other male ancestors


Reply 25 - Posted by: southernstorm, 1/17/2013 1:46:05 PM     (No. 9122405)

I´ve been researching as a hobby for many years. Recently found my 5th great aunt was Mary Surratt who was found guilty and hung by the Federal Government for conspiracy and assistance to those that killed President Lincoln. If my grandfather knew this information, he would be humiliated. To me, this information is just history.


Reply 26 - Posted by: gillyo, 1/17/2013 2:27:53 PM     (No. 9122495)

My grandmother was a Reading from New Jersey, descended from the Ryersons of New Amsterdam, and a Mayflower descendant. She took great pride in her family background, sometimes to the point of snobbishness.

Anyway, she was especially proud to be a descendant of Mayflower passenger Edward Doty.

My mother´s family wasn´t as prestigious so she tended to lord it over them a little. So, you can imagine my surprise when I discovered that my mother is a descendant of Stephen Hopkins. Hopkins is an interesting character, who is said to have been Shakespeare´s inspiration for the character of Stefano in "The Tempest." He was shipwrecked in Bermuda, then managed to get to Jamestown, returned to England, and then sailed with the Pilgrims on the Mayflower.

The kicker is that Edward Doty was Stephen Hopkins´ servant.

My grandmother passed away years ago but I would have given anything to see her reaction to that bit of news!


Reply 27 - Posted by: anotherctyankee, 1/17/2013 7:50:07 PM     (No. 9123083)

I tried to research, but I was a babe in the woods. My daughter did as much as she had the interest in doing. My family has been in America for a long time, going back to Georgia, Louisiana and Texas. I have no idea of the original countries. My husbands family is newer to the U.S. and came from Ireland and Spain. What my daughter found was boring and nothing like the stories my grandma passed down. Like, my great grandfather was the inspiration of the book ´Trail of the Lonesome Pine´. My mother said grandma was more interested in telling us what we wanted to hear. It´s easy to get off on the wrong branch of a family, so it´s hard to know if any of the genealogy is true.


Reply 28 - Posted by: ColonialAmerican1623, 1/17/2013 9:42:23 PM     (No. 9123293)

You never know, maybe we are all related.

Thanks to an article posted here recently, I found a copy of a letter between George Washington and a family member relating to a land purchase. Before that, in the 1600´s let´s just say we were in shipping.



Post Reply   Close thread 719381




Below, you will find ...

Most Recent Articles posted by "Drive"

and

Most Active Articles (last 48 hours)




Most Recent Articles posted by "Drive"



The Deafening Silence that
Signals Our Demise
Townhall, by Diana West    Original Article
Posted By: Drive- 4/5/2013 11:56:32 AM     Post Reply
Get ready for the last straw. First, though, I´d like to suggest that anyone reading this column in a local newspaper or news site pat the editor on the back for publishing what in our neo-medieval world of fear amounts to a forbidden column. Yup, I am about to say something about the Great Barack Obama Identity/Eligibility Scandal again. I know that this is one rich and urgent topic that doesn´t see the light of day in certain so-called news outlets -- and I say that from the experience of watching my own syndicated columns

9/11 Remains Still Found,
and Still Sought
New York Times, by Jim Dwyer    Original Article
Posted By: Drive- 4/5/2013 9:48:01 AM     Post Reply
You could hear the deep breath, the pause before a conversational plunge. On the phone were Monica Gabrielle and Kristen Breitweiser. Their husbands died at the World Trade Center in the Sept. 11 attack. This week, a new effort to find remains from the site uncovered 39 pieces of what appeared to be human bones. That was the yield from the first three days of work in a process that is expected to go on for at least two months.

Obama Budget to Include Cuts
to Programs in Hopes of Deal
New York Times, by Jackie Calmes    Original Article
Posted By: Drive- 4/5/2013 9:00:00 AM     Post Reply
WASHINGTON — President Obama next week will take the political risk of formally proposing cuts to Social Security and Medicare in his annual budget in an effort to demonstrate his willingness to compromise with Republicans and revive prospects for a long-term deficit-reduction deal, administration officials say. In a significant shift in fiscal strategy, Mr. Obama on Wednesday will send a budget plan to Capitol Hill that departs from the usual presidential wish list that Republicans typically declare dead on arrival.

Obama´s Gambit Raises Pressure
on Boehner, Edges Washington
Toward Budget Deal
National Journal, by Ron Fournier    Original Article
Posted By: Drive- 4/5/2013 8:29:33 AM     Post Reply
Washington is edging closer to a budget deal, thanks to a gutsy change in strategy at the White House. Next week, President Obama will propose specific cuts to Social Security and Medicare in his annual budget, according to senior White House officials. That will put the onus on House Speaker John Boehner to show some leadership, too. He needs to push Republicans toward accepting tax increases beyond the $600 billion approved in December. It can be done. As I reported last month, Washington’s biggest myth is that a budget deal is out of reach

Do North Korea’s threats mask
power struggle behind the scenes?
McClatchy News, by Matthew Schofield and Tom Lasseter    Original Article
Posted By: Drive- 4/4/2013 8:08:25 AM     Post Reply
WASHINGTON — The North Korean army warned the United States on Wednesday it has been cleared to wage nuclear war using “smaller, lighter and diversified weapons.” In a speech earlier in the day, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel noted that North Korea has both the nuclear weapons and the delivery system “now.” It’s the latest round in an escalation of rhetoric and actions that began with a North Korean nuclear test in February. Still, military officials and experts don’t expect North Korea to launch an attack on the United States.

What´s really happening
in North Korea?
Politico, by Dylan Byers    Original Article
Posted By: Drive- 4/3/2013 3:29:42 PM     Post Reply
Two breaking news alerts came through the wire this afternoon: First, the AP sent word that Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel has called North Korea´s latest rhetoric a real, clear danger and threat to the U.S. and its allies. Within minutes, CNBC announced that the Pentagon has sent a new missile defense to Guam. The reports that followed those alerts added some meat to the storty -- "Hagel´s comments come as tensions continue to rise between North and South Korea," etc. -- but they are notably lacking in context. How serious is the threat, really? Are the North and South on the verge of war, or is this yet another bluff?

Menendez allies now accusing
FBI of kidnapping, harassment
Daily Caller, by Charles C. Johnson    Original Article
Posted By: Drive- 4/3/2013 3:26:29 PM     Post Reply
In a bizarre new twist to the saga of Sen. Bob Menendez and his donor-friend Salomon Melgen, members of Melgen’s circle are now hurling accusations at FBI agents investigating the pair’s relationship. During an appearance on the weekly Dominican TV show La Respuesta last week, Melgen’s uncle Vincho Castillo accused the FBI of threatening and kidnapping two of Melgen’s maids. In addition to being the Dominican Republic’s top drug cop and founder of a far right-wing political party, Vincho Castillo is also the father of Vinicito Castillo, a lawyer who allegedly participated in sex parties organized by Melgen.

From Lincoln to Obama,
Presidents as Propagandists
National Journal, by Ron Fournier    Original Article
Posted By: Drive- 4/2/2013 3:47:21 PM     Post Reply
My nephew’s high school government class is studying propaganda, a word most students associated with Hitler, Goebbels, and the like. “I deal with propagandists every day,” I told the class in the Detroit area last week. “They work in the White House and in Congress--Republicans and Democrats alike.” The kids were a bit surprised. “Are you calling them Nazis?” one asked. Of course not, I replied, but politicians today are using new communications tools to spread their version of the truth, much of it misleading. A smart piece by Nancy Benac of the Associated Press describes how the Obama White House “image machine” works--“serving up a stream of words, images, and videos that invariably cast the president as commanding, compassionate, and on the ball.

Will Obama’s Majority Survive?
New York Magazine, by Jonathan Chait    Original Article
Posted By: Drive- 4/1/2013 3:11:18 PM     Post Reply
Since November, the prospective death of the Republican coalition has hovered over American politics, and the autopsy has gained renewed attention in light of the debates over gay marriage and immigration, both of which split the GOP from rising chunks of the electorate. I’m an advocate of the theory, first put forward a decade ago by Ruy Teixeira and John Judis, that the electorate is forming a natural Democratic majority. The Republican Party appears to be caught in a double bind, in which the electorate is growingly progressively less white, and even younger white voters hold less conservative views than older ones. What’s more, evidence suggests that voters maintain the partisan allegiances they form at a young age. The picture looks grim for the GOP.

West Wing Spared From
Sequester Cuts, So Far
Roll Call, by Steven T. Dennis    Original Article
Posted By: Drive- 4/1/2013 3:06:32 PM     Post Reply
The sequester doesn’t appear to have hit the West Wing of the White House particularly hard. Press Secretary Jay Carney told reporters — after more than a month of dodging questions on White House effects — that 480 employees of the White House Office of Management and Budget have received furlough notices. Even that tidbit is weeks old. After Congress let the March 1 deadline pass without replacing automatic across-the-board spending cuts, executive branch agencies have been scrambling to cut their budgets and furlough employees.

A-Rod shows at Yankee Stadium,
not worried about drug probe
New York Post, by Dan Martin    Original Article
Posted By: Drive- 4/1/2013 2:42:40 PM     Post Reply
Alex Rodriguez said Monday he’s not worried about a potential suspension regarding his ties to performance enhancing drugs and still intends to play for the Yankees this season.“No, I’m not,” Rodriguez said when asked if he was concerned about being targeted by MLB or a possible suspension. “But I’m not gonna further discuss this. At some point, I feel that everything will be good.”That point has not arrived. The third baseman acknowledged meeting with the league about their investigation into Biogenesis, the anti-aging clinic whose records contained Rodriguez’s name. He declined to go into details, though.

Betraying one of the
CIA’s ‘Band of Sisters’?
Washington Post, by Marc A. Thiessen    Original Article
Posted By: Drive- 4/1/2013 2:20:59 PM     Post Reply
Former CIA director Mike Hayden credits “an incredible band of sisters” for the success of the operation that found and brought down Osama bin Laden. Now one of those sisters has been appointed acting chief of the CIA’s National Clandestine service. It is a major milestone for women at the CIA, the first time in the agency’s history that a female officer has headed the clandestine service. But The Post reports that CIA Director John Brennan is “hesitating” at giving her the position on a permanent basis, because of her past association with the CIA’s rendition, detention and interrogation (RDI) program. This is an outrage. According to several former senior CIA officials I spoke with, the officer is highly respected and unquestionably qualified for this post.



Most Active Articles (last 48 hours)



We are living in a dying country (Thread 2)
73 replie(s)
Rushlimbaugh.com, by Rush Limbaugh    Original Article
Posted By: LComStaff- 4/7/2013 6:49:54 AM     Post Reply
This is the second thread of an article posted yesterday which can be found here:http://lucianne.com/thread/?artnum=730032

´My bangs are getting
a little irritating´: Michelle
Obama admits she already regrets
her high-maintenance hairdo

66 replie(s)
Daily Mail (UK), by Margot Peppers    Original Article
Posted By: pineledger- 4/7/2013 7:43:42 AM     Post Reply
Michelle Obama has admitted that she is already tired of the bangs she first sported in January. The First Lady said in an interview with Entertainment Tonight: ´Bangs are a day-by-day proposition. They´re starting to grow out, get a little irritating.´ Still, she hasn´t let her hairdo woes get her down. ´It´s okay,´ she said after her initial complaint. ´We´ll be good.´ The first indication that her hairstyle was becoming a burden came about last weekend, when Malia, 14, was spotted adjusting her mother´s hair during the White House Easter Egg Roll.

McCain: ´I don´t understand´
GOP filibuster on guns

66 replie(s)
Politico, by Jennifer Epstein    Original Article
Posted By: JoniTx- 4/7/2013 12:18:14 PM     Post Reply
Sen. John McCain says he doesn´t understand the threats from some of his Republican colleagues to filibuster a bill on background checks to buy guns. "I don´t understand it," the Arizona Republican said on Sunday of the threat coming from Sen. Rand Paul,Sen. Ted Cruz, Sen. Mike Lee and nine other Republicans. "The purpose of the United States Senate is to debate and to vote and to let the people know where we stand.” "What are we afraid of? ... If this issue is as important as we all think it is, why not take ... it up and debate?"

Christians, here´s why we´re
losing our religion

52 replie(s)
Fox News, by Craig Groeschel    Original Article
Posted By: STLstudent- 4/7/2013 5:13:55 PM     Post Reply
Recent research indicates that the number of people who do not consider themselves a part of an organized religion is steadily on the rise. Interestingly enough, though the number of those religiously unaffiliated is increasing, there is little to no trend in the number of those who express atheist or agnostic beliefs. People aren’t saying they don’t believe in God. They’re saying they don’t believe in religion. They are not rejecting Christ. They are rejecting the church. This begs the question, “Why are we losing our religion?”

Broadcasters worry
about ´Zero TV´ homes

48 replie(s)
Associated Press, by Ryan Nakashima    Original Article
Posted By: Ribicon- 4/7/2013 2:43:40 PM     Post Reply
Los Angeles — Some people have had it with TV. They´ve had enough of the 100-plus channel universe. They don´t like timing their lives around network show schedules. They´re tired of $100-plus monthly bills. A growing number of them have stopped paying for cable and satellite TV service, and don´t even use an antenna to get free signals over the air. (Snip) Last month, the Nielsen Co. started labeling people in this group "Zero TV" households, because they fall outside the traditional definition of a TV home. There are 5 million of these residences in the U.S., up from

Mother Of Slain Benghazi
Officer To Sean Hannity:
‘They Want Me To Shut Up’

44 replie(s)
Mediaite, by A.J. Delgado    Original Article
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 5:00:16 AM     Post Reply
On Friday, Sean Hannity brought Pat Smith, mother of the late Sean Smith, on his radio program. The 34-year-old information management officer was one of four Americans murdered in the Benghazi embassy attack on September 11, 2012. In the chilling interview, a distraught Ms. Smith, in tears, pleaded for answers and spoke of the efforts to silence her. Ms. Smith first relayed how her son, prior to the attack, requested additional security in advance and warned the State Department: He did tell them, ahead of time, he typed it into his little typewriter over there,

Vanishing workforce
weighs on growth

42 replie(s)
Washington Post, by Jim Tankersley    Original Article
Posted By: Dreadnought- 4/6/2013 11:28:59 PM     Post Reply
Put out an all-points bulletin: Millions of Americans have gone missing from the workforce. Every month that those would-be workers are gone raises the odds that they might never come back, dimming the prospects for future economic growth. The vanishing trend is more than a decade old, but it accelerated during the Great Recession. Throughout 2012, economists held out hope that it had stopped. But then came Friday’s jobs report, and hopes were dashed. The Labor Department reported that the U.S. labor force — everyone who has a job or is looking for one — shrank

Obama critic apologizes for
his ´poorly chosen words´
on gay marriage

41 replie(s)
The Hill [Washington DC], by Alexandra Jaffe    Original Article
Posted By: JoniTx- 4/6/2013 12:18:19 PM     Post Reply
Neurosurgeon Ben Carson, considered by some to be a potential Republican contender for president, apologized to Johns Hopkins University for the "poorly chosen words" he used in expressing his opposition to gay marriage last month.“I am sorry for any embarrassment this has caused,” Carson said in the letter, reported in New York Magazine.(Snip) "Although I do believe marriage is between a man and a woman, there are much less offensive ways to make that point. I hope all will look at a lifetime of service over some poorly chosen words.” Carson will remain as commencement speaker at Johns Hopkins,

The Secrets of Princeton
40 replie(s)
New York Times, by Ross Douthat    Original Article
Posted By: Oblio- 4/7/2013 8:08:09 AM     Post Reply
Susan Patton, the Princeton alumna who became famous for her letter urging Ivy League women to use their college years to find a mate, has been denounced as a traitor to feminism, to coeducation, to the university ideal. But really she’s something much more interesting: a traitor to her class. Her betrayal consists of being gauche enough to acknowledge publicly a truth that everyone who’s come up through Ivy League culture knows intuitively —

Is going gluten-free
healthier for everybody?

34 replie(s)
The Week, by Staff    Original Article
Posted By: NorthernDog- 4/7/2013 11:28:27 AM     Post Reply
Gluten-free diets are all the rage, but they can be dangerous if not done right. What is gluten? It´s the spongy complex of proteins, found naturally in wheat, rye, and barley, that gives elasticity to dough and allows it to rise. When flour is moistened and either kneaded or mixed into dough, gluten molecules form an elastic, microscopic latticework that traps the carbon dioxide produced when yeast ferments, causing dough to inflate like a hot air balloon. Baking hardens the gluten, which helps the finished product keep its shape. Wheat — and gluten — is ubiquitous in the American diet.

Adam Lanza´s murder spree at Sandy
Hook may have been´act of revenge´

31 replie(s)
New York Daily News, by Matthew Lysiak and Rich Schapiro    Original Article
Posted By: noproblems- 4/7/2013 9:52:58 AM     Post Reply
Newtown killer Adam Lanza may have launched his murder spree at Sandy Hook Elementary School as an “act of revenge,” the Daily News has learned. A close friend of Lanza’s mother told The News that the troubled boy was a target of relentless bullying when he attended the Connecticut school years ago. “I think Adam felt betrayed by the school and this was his act of revenge,” said Marvin LaFontaine, a friend of Nancy Lanza’s. “Nancy told me he was being picked on at school. That they were just torturing him.”
Source and text corrected by Staff.

Parents outraged that Mass.
kids were denied lunch

30 replie(s)
Associated Press, by Staff    Original Article
Posted By: beancounter- 4/6/2013 5:21:39 PM     Post Reply
ATTLEBORO, Mass. — As many as 25 students at a Massachusetts school were denied lunch this week — with at least some forced to dump their food in the garbage — because they couldn´t pay, school officials and parents said. Outraged parents said some students at Coelho Middle School in Attleboro cried when they were told by a worker for the district´s food service provider they could not eat on Tuesday because they couldn´t pay or their pre-paid accounts were short on funds. The on-site director for the company, Whitsons Culinary Group of Islandia, N.Y., was placed on administrative leave by


Post Reply   Close thread 719381





Home Page | Latest Posts | Links | Must Reads | Update Profile | Register | Rules & FAQs | Search | Post | Contact | RSS | Contribute | Logout | Forgot Password

© 2013 Lucianne.com Media Inc.

FS