Monthly Archives: April 2004

Condi Contradicted: Bush Knew Of Possible Al-Qaeda Attack


Condoleezza Rice before the Sept. 11 commission this past Thursday. Members include
Jamie S. Gorelick, left, and Thomas H. Kean, right.


The New York Times reports today that Bush was briefed at his ranch in August, 2001 about a planned Osama bin Laden attack in the U.S.

President Bush was told more than a month before the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, that supporters of Osama bin Laden planned an attack within the United States with explosives and wanted to hijack airplanes, a government official said Friday. The warning came in a secret briefing that Mr. Bush received at his ranch in Crawford, Texas, on Aug. 6, 2001. A report by a joint Congressional committee last year alluded to a “closely held intelligence report” that month about the threat of an attack by Al Qaeda, and the official confirmed an account by The Associated Press on Friday saying that the report was in fact part of the President’s briefing in Crawford.

The disclosure contradicts repeated assertions by the White House that the briefing the President received about the Qaeda threat was “historical” in nature and that the White House had little reason to suspect a Qaeda attack within American borders.
Meanwhile, the Philadelphia Journal’s Rittenhouse Review offers a raft of wrap-up editorial reviews on the testimony of U.S. National Security Advisor, Condoleezza Rice.

20 Things About Condie That You Probably Didn’t Know


RICE


Condoleezza Rice is having a very bad week. Not only did she have to place herself in the role of Bush apologist, for failing to act to stem the terrorist threat prior to 9-11, as well as have to respond before the 9-11 Commission to former counterterrorism director Richard A. Clarke’s allegation that he had warned Rice about an “imminent threat” of a catastrophic attack months prior to 9-11, this week former Senator Gary Hart and co-chair of the U.S. Commission on National Security told the Commission that on January 31, 2001, he had handed Bush and Rice a report, from his bi-partisan panel, which warned of a “devastating terrorist attack on America.”
But, according to Hart, the Bush administration never followed up on the commission’s urgent recommendations, even after he repeated them in a private White House meeting with Rice just days before 9/11.
VanRamblings asks: Connie, oh, Connie, where did you go wrong in your just shy of 50 years of life on this planet? In an effort to humanize the embattled Bush administration National Security advisor, reader Daryl Magnuson sends along this set of interesting “facts” about Rice.
Read ’em and weep.

Movie Trailer Heaven: A Preview of the Summer Movie Season


SUMMERMOVIEPREVIEW

Yes, it’s that time of year again, when Hollywood brings out the heavy artillery, and sets about to release their sure-to-be-blockbuster slate of summer movie eye-candy.
Perhaps, the most anticipated film of the summer movie season is Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man 2, due June 30, just in time for the long holiday weekend. Sony’s Columbia-Tri Star has just released a new, longer trailer for the film. If you’ve got Quicktime Pro, you can save the trailer to your hard drive, by clicking on the down arrow at the bottom right on the screen (once the trailer has finished), and clicking on ‘Save as Quicktime Movie’. Possibly, reason enough to purchase Quicktime 6.5?
In respect of trailers (which is to say, previews) for the remaining upcoming summer-movie releases, of course you can always go to apple.com/trailers, and click on any one of the upcoming previews for films about to be released. We’ll save you a bit of time and trouble, though, by linking to the films that VanRamblings is most looking forward to summer 2004.
Coming up May 7th, the summer’s first blockbuster, Universal’s Van Helsing, which will be followed by Wolfgang Peterson’s Warner Bros. film release Troy (May 14). Pretty much everyone, one would think, is looking forward to the release of Dreamworks’ Shrek 2 (May 21). On a lighter and slighter note, there’s Touchstone’s Raising Helen (May 26), followed by one of the most anticipated films of the summer movie season, Roland Emmerich’s 20th-Century Fox release of The Day After Tomorrow (May 28).
June sees the release of the latest instalment of the J.K. Rowling series, Warner Bros’ Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (June 4); the filmed-in-Vancouver Universal film The Chronicles of Riddick, and Paramount’s The Stepford Wives (both June 11); Steven Spielberg’s The Terminal (June 18); and MGM’s Cole Porter biopic, De-Lovely (June 25).
In the second half of the summer, VanRamblings will set aside monies to gain entrance to Fox Searchlight’s The Clearing (July 2); Touchstone Pictures’ King Arthur (July 7); the Will Ferrell comedy, Anchorman (July 9); Will Smith’s filmed-in-Vancouver I, Robot (July 16); Matt Damon, back in The Bourne Supremacy; M. Night Shyamalan’s The Village (July 30); Michael Mann’s Collateral, (August 6); and 20th Century Fox’s Alien vs. Predator (August 13), among a host of others.
As more movie previews are made available, links to the trailers will be posted on VanRamblings.

Risqué Business: Critics Mixed on ‘The Girl Next Door’

girl-next-door.jpg

The Chicago Sun-Times’ Roger Ebert may feel that The Girl Next Door “is a dishonest, quease-inducing ‘comedy’ that had me feeling uneasy and then unclean,” but VanRamblings tends to fall more into the camp of New York Daily News’ Jami Bernard, when she writes: “Once in a very long while, a truly memorable romantic teen comedy comes along. The Girl Next Door is one. This funny, surprising gem joins the ranks of Risky Business and Say Anything, comedies with heart and charisma.”
See for yourself, by taking a peek at this R-rated, uncut version of the movie trailer — get it while you can, cuz it’ll probably be taken down quite soon (you may want to raise the size of the screen by ‘pulling out’ the bottom right-hand corner of your Windows Media Player).
Meanwhile, if The Girl Next Door isn’t quite your cup of tea, take a peek at the A-list movie previews for the summer movie season (just above).