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| Loans Due — It's time to pay Mon, 30 Jun 2008 01:40:00 EST Kansas Department of Transportation Secretary Deb Miller wants people to call members of the state's congressional delegation and urge them to steer some money into the federal Highway Trust Fund. |
| Thumbs up: Local athletes Mon, 30 Jun 2008 01:40:00 EST Eight local high school students were standing tall Wednesday when they were honored by the Topeka Shawnee County Sports Council at its annual banquet and Hall of Fame induction ceremony. |
| Letter: Frustrated officers Mon, 30 Jun 2008 01:40:00 EST I'm responding to The Capital-Journal's June 19 article, "Hecht fires back at criticism by cops," and specifically Hecht's statement about police officers being mad because he prosecutes them. I would like to make an observation based upon my 15 years as the lead chaplain for the Topeka Police Department. |
| Letter: Siren debate Mon, 30 Jun 2008 01:40:00 EST The debate and finger pointing over the June 19 incident with the warning sirens shows a lack of communication. |
| Letter: Middle East progress Mon, 30 Jun 2008 01:40:00 EST I have been reading the latest news coming out of Israel with cautious optimism — the ceasefire with Hamas, an offer to begin talks with Lebanon and the ongoing talks with Syria and the Palestinians. It looks like Israel is heading in the right direction in its quest for security and peace. |
| Letter: Diplomacy needed Mon, 30 Jun 2008 01:40:00 EST Throughout history, we have had a diplomatic corps worthy of its name, until now. |
| Letter: Build nuclear Mon, 30 Jun 2008 01:40:00 EST I concur with Ford Ross' June 24 letter regarding the wind farm near Ellsworth. |
| LEONARD PITTS: OBAMA SHOULDN'T DISTANCE HIMSELF Mon, 30 Jun 2008 01:42 CDT It is not difficult to understand why Barack Obama has a fear of scarves. In the 17 months he has been pursuing the presidency, the senator has faced a crude and shameless campaign from conservative pundits, GOP functionaries and assorted ignoramuses in the peanut gallery to prove him a secret Muslim -- a "Manchurian candidate," as one put it -- trained from birth to subvert America from within and, I don't know, make us all eat falafels or something. On about a half-second of intelligent reflection, the flaw in that theory is apparent: If unfriendly forces had indeed inserted a "secret" Muslim among us, said Muslim would have blond hair, blue eyes, flag pins out the wazoo and a name like Joe Smith. Too bad intelligent reflection is a stranger to the people in question. With a grim fanaticism, they seize upon every perceived crumb of Obama's "Muslimness" to press their case, using everything from his middle name to his disdain for the cheap patriotism of the American flag lapel pin to a photo of him wearing native dress on a trip to Somalia. So it's easy to see why workers for his campaign barred two women wearing hijabs, Muslim head scarves, from sitting behind him, within range of TV cameras, at a June 16 rally in Detroit. When someone is throwing at you, you don't hand him rocks. But that doesn't make what the workers did right. Yes, Obama apologized profusely. Good for him. It would be easier to take the apology seriously, though, if: Somewhere in the past year of manifold denials that he is a Muslim, Obama had found the time, space or guts to point out that there's nothing wrong with being a Muslim, particularly in a nation that enshrined religious freedom in its founding documents. And he hadn't spent so much time treating the American Muslim community as one does the carrier of a contagious disease. |
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