Two German women complaining on office email about their partners' poor sex drive found the details of their private lives broadcast to thousands after one of them hit the wrong button, Bild newspaper said Saturday. "Everyone stares at us now and whispers behind our backs," Anica G., a 21-year-old worker at the Federal Labor Office, told Bild.
The emails between Anica and colleague Christina S., with descriptions on how the women try but fail to arouse their partners, were first sent by accident to other colleagues in their department at the Labor Office. They were then forwarded to thousands throughout the Labor Office and other government agencies and widely distributed by recipients to people across Germany. Anica told the daily she and her colleague had not broken any rules because the emails were written on breaks.
Posted by: Fred ||
08/20/2006 00:00 ||
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#1
Never send anything in e-mail that you wouldn't mind showing up as the centerpiece of a Superbowl half-time show. Heh heh.
Anybody got a copy of that e-mail? I think I'll go to Germany for my next vacation.
BRUSSELS - Twenty-eight inmates of Belgiums Termonde prison escaped in the early hours of Saturday but six have already been recaptured, the Belga press agency reported.
Two prisoners managed to force their cell door open and took several prison guards hostage, demanding their keys. They then released 26 other inmates. The escaped prisoners managed to get into the prison courtyard, from where they scaled the prison walls.
The authorities were on Saturday unable to say how the cell door had been forced, or whether any dangerous criminals were among the fugitives.
Thought for sure there would be something about a tunnel and a nearby mosque.
Posted by: Steve White ||
08/20/2006 00:00 ||
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In an exclusive appearance on "This Week with George Stephanopoulos", Senator John Kerry, D-Mass., blasted fellow Democrat Senator Joe Lieberman for continuing his bid in the Connecticut Senate race despite a narrow loss to newcomer challenger Ned Lamont in the Democratic primary earlier this month.
"I'm concerned that (Lieberman) is making a Republican case," Kerry told ABC News, accusing the 2000 Democratic vice presidential candidate of "adopting the rhetoric of Dick Cheney," on the issue of Iraq. Kerry continued, "Joe Lieberman is out of step with the people of Connecticut," insisting Liberman's stance on Iraq, "shows you just why he got in trouble with the Democrats there."
Joe also has a near-perfect liberal rating on everything domestic, and the people of his state seem to like him.
Kerry called the Connecticut Senator's Independent bid a "huge mistake" and applauded businessman-turned-politician as "courageous" for challenging Lieberman on the war. Of his own views on Iraq, Kerry stated forthrightly, "The course of this country in Iraq is making the world more dangerous."
Thank gawd we didn't elect this idjit.
Posted by: Steve White ||
08/20/2006 10:27 ||
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"I'm concerned that (Lieberman) is making a Republican case," Kerry told ABC News,
And we're all delighted! (My fav pic of Kerry by the way, thanks)
Posted by: Frank G ||
08/20/2006 11:50 Comments ||
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How much is the Dark Lord Rove paying these clowns to bad-mouth Lieberman in order to boost his poll numbers even more?
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut ||
08/20/2006 14:37 Comments ||
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I live in CT and Lieberman is not the nice quiet-but-dull guy he seems -- he's as jackass mean and vindictive as any of 'em -- and he's ready to stick it up his party's ass and break it off.
Posted by: regular joe ||
08/20/2006 15:08 Comments ||
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Hey, Mr. Kerry - I hear Lamont's rich, you gonna go for it a third time?
Football authorities have dropped restrictions on men watching women play soccer, a senior official said on Saturday. "Anybody can come and watch the matches," Pakistan Football Federation technical director Mir Farooq told Reuters. "We have made adequate security and seating arrangements for everyone."
When the women's championship was launched last year in the country, the PFF did not allow unaccompanied men to watch. Only men who came with their families were allowed in. Farooq said the women players had to wear baggy tracksuit trousers and long-sleeved shirts and their matches were to be supervised by a women referee, helped by one male and one female assistant. "We want to promote women's sports but we are also aware of the sensitivities associated with women's sports," he said. National football coach Tariq Lutfi said more women were playing soccer, particularly after the World Cup. As a result, 12 teams are taking part in this year's competition, up from eight last year.
Posted by: Fred ||
08/20/2006 00:00 ||
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This is great news until the first guy gets a boner and then both teams will have to have their throats slit to preserve honor.
#2
Football authorities have dropped restrictions on men watching women play soccer, a senior official said on Saturday.
An announcement made from behind bulletproof glass, it sounds like.
"Anybody can come and watch the matches," Pakistan Football Federation technical director Mir Farooq told Reuters.
Could you invite UBL?
"We have made adequate security and seating arrangements for everyone."
Delta Force will take care of security for UBL. Then they'll take care of UBL.
When the women's championship was launched last year in the country, the PFF did not allow unaccompanied men to watch. Only men who came with their families were allowed in.
I guess some letches in the PFF didn't have families.
Farooq said the women players had to wear baggy tracksuit trousers and long-sleeved shirts and their matches were to be supervised by a women referee, helped by one male and one female assistant.
I suppose the male has to be a blind eunuch?
Wait a minute, no chastity belt?!
"We want to promote women's sports but we are also aware of the sensitivities associated with women's sports," he said.
Read: Please don't hurt us, Mr. Extremist!
National football coach Tariq Lutfi said more women were playing soccer, particularly after the World Cup. As a result, 12 teams are taking part in this year's competition, up from eight last year.
#3
"Anybody can come and watch the matches," Pakistan Football Federation technical director Mir Farooq told Reuters. "We have made adequate security and seating arrangements for everyone."
So they finally got around to importing at huge Japanese wide screen display? Are they going to wrap it in a burkka first?
An unusual sight was seen a few days ago, with the exit of Paratrooper Brigade forces from Lebanon: one of the brigade reserve soldiers was carrying, along with all his heavy equipment and weapon, a white kitten. "On the way back to Israeli territory we passed through the village of Kauzer," said the soldier, "and all of a sudden I saw a kitten coming out of one of the houses. After a few seconds I realized it is wounded and that its hearing has been hurt. I picked it up and carried it for six kilometers, until we reached Israeli territory. I decided it deserves a better future. After all, it is not its fault that war broke out." The first thing the cat and its new owner did after having crossed the border into Israeli territory was to share IDF military canned meat. The cat was named Kauzer by its new owner.
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.