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A federal judge held a reporter for Time magazine in contempt of court Monday for refusing to testify before a grand jury investigating the leak of the identity of a covert CIA officer.In
stanley cup website an order issued July 20 but not made public until Monday, U.S. District Judge Thomas F. Hogan ruled that Time s Matthew Cooper and M
stanley flask eet the Press host Tim Russert were required to testify regarding alleged conversations they had with a specified executive branch official. NBC News issued a statement saying that Russert already had been interviewed under oath by prosecutors on Saturday under an agreement to avoid a protracted court fight. The interview concerned a July 2003 phone conversation he had with Vice President Cheney s chief of staff, Lewis Scooter Libby.Time and Cooper, however, did not agree to be interviewed and intend to appeal the judge s ruling, said Managing Editor Jim Kelly. If Time loses those appeals, Cooper could be jailed under Hogan s order until he agrees to appear and the magazine could be fined $1,000 a day. We are disappointed in the decision, Kelly said. We don t think a journalist should be required to give up a confide
stanley ca ntial source. We re going to appeal it as far as it goes. Neal Shapiro, president of NBC News, said the network agreed that forcing reporters to testify about their sources is contrary to the First Amendment s guarantee of a free press. Shapiro said Russert answered only limited questions about the conversation with Libby without Jrgb Josef Stalin s daughter Lana Peters dies at 85
Mass flip card mosaics are created by having large groups of people in stadium seating hold up cards that, together, form a complete image. In North Korea, these colorful images often serve as propaganda, celebrating the nation leaders, prescribed lifestyle, and even its nuclear weapons. The photo above was taken by Elizabeth Dalziel/AP
stanley cups uk . A flip card mosaic of young and healthy North Koreans during the Arirang Mass Games, the largest choreographed gymnastics display in the world with over 100,000
stanley thermobecher dancers taking part in the performance, Aug 8, 2007. Photo by Elizabeth Dalziel/AP Thousands
stanley water bottle of North Korean children dance and hold up colored cards to form a picture of Kim Il-sung at a rally in Pyongyang, North Korea, April 28, 1995. Photo by John Leicester/AP The portrait of the Great Leader Kim Il-sung 1912-1994 , the country Eternal President during a performance Oct 23, 2000. Photo by Chien-Min Chung/AP Soldier images formed by thousands of children holding up cards during the annual massive propaganda spectacle known as a mass game held in Pyongyang, North Korea, October 11, 2005. The show, which has been staged six times a week since Aug. 15, was the largest in three years and has attracted foreign tourists from South Korea and even the U.S. to the reclusive country. Photo by Ng Han Guan/AP Pyongyang river view via Huffington Post, photo by Jeremy Hunter Happy children, 2007, 2011 and 2012 Photo by Mike Connolly, Michael Day and N