Word: mueller
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...MUELLER'S REDUCED CARB SPAGHETTI VS. MUELLER'S REGULAR...
Compare this to the Red Sox. Pokey Reese should be called Reesamus, or maybe Pokeyhauntus, the God of Defense. He’ll shift over to second base with the return of Nomar, who we all know has fantastic range at short. Bill Mueller is a rock at third, Johnny Damon, dead arm and all, patrols centerfield like a pro and Jason Varitek is outstanding behind the plate...
...shortage of surveillance specialists makes round-the-clock monitoring of suspects difficult, if not impossible, in many cities. This means that if the FBI tracks down someone dangerous in, say, San Antonio, Texas, it might not be able to keep an eye on him. Despite Mueller's focus on terrorism, agents are sometimes pulled away to handle traditional criminal cases. A long-awaited and badly needed computer overhaul is overbudget and behind schedule. Which means, the commission stated, "the FBI still does not know what's in its files." A longtime FBI analyst put it this way: "The FBI director...
...preparing legislation that would create what he calls a "service within the service" at the FBI to focus on intelligence gathering, not law enforcement. It would be staffed with its own corps of spies recruited from college campuses, the CIA and other agencies. According to his allies in Congress, Mueller is leaning toward this idea himself. Meanwhile, support is growing on the Hill for a plan drafted by two-time National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft that would create a new intelligence czar with budget and program authority over the CIA and nearly a score of other intelligence units now under...
...director Robert Mueller repeatedly pledges to leave no stone unturned in investigating terrorism--to the widespread applause of those who apparently think that it is only others whose privacy or civil rights can be violated by this aggressive posture. The supposition here is that the FBI is not spying enough in this country, that the failure to prevent 9/11 was due less to an inability "to connect the dots" than to "too few useful dots." I strongly disagree. We knew a great deal before 9/11. The problem was, "We didn't know what we knew," as a former FBI official...