Events
The New Jersey legislature yesterday voted to abolish the death penalty, becoming the first state to do so formally since executions were re-instated in the U.S. in 1976: The Assembly voted 44-36 on Thursday to approve the legislation, which passed the Senate on Monday by a 21-16 vote. Gov. Jon S. Corzine said he will sign it within a week. New Jersey reinstated the death penalty in 1982, six years after the U.S. Supreme Court allowed states to resume executions, but nobody has been executed in the...
Note from the dog-walking service: "He owes me one. I pulled a 6-inch string out of his ass." LMAO
Last night the Evanston city council approved what will be the tallest building in Illinois outside Chicago: The Evanston Plan Commission tonight voted 4-3 to recommend approval of the proposed 49-story tower at 708 Church St. to the City Council. The commissioners were sharply divided on whether development downtown over the last several decades has made the Fountain Square block an appropriate site for high-rise development. Commissioners who looked to the east and west saw Sherman Plaza, the Chase...
Giant gay flesh-eating rats: Romney opposes them. Via Talking Points Memo:
The paper's signed, forget the pensWonder if we'll ever meet again? —Aimee Mann
Apparently this is the first time since records have been kept (back to 1924) that we've had four consecutive days of gleeshy, sleety, nearly-frozen weather.
I just got very good news for Parker: for the first time in his entire doggy life, he is free from all intestinal parasites. No more bad butt.
This is one of my favorite milestones. Thanks to the analemma, tonight's sunset (4:20 pm) is the earliest of the year in Chicago. Of course, the sunrise still gets later every day until January 4th. At least tomorrow we'll have just a smidge more evening light than we'll have today.
The Stanford law professor is focusing on corruption as a way of combating creeping copyrights: Mr Lessig has concentrated for a decade on copyright law and its interaction with the internet. So he left some people feeling confused earlier this year when he announced a new focus for his campaigning efforts: tackling corruption. Not everyone understood that this change in academic and activist emphasis is more of a shift in strategy than in substance. For years Mr Lessig has presented legal arguments...
Princeton economist (and New York Times columnist) Paul Krugman thinks Tresury's subprime plan won't do much: [W]e're almost surely looking at less than $10 billion in losses avoided. Meanwhile, estimates of subprime losses to investors are currently running in the $300 -$400 billion range. So the back of my envelope suggests that this plan is a drop in the bucket.
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