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By George Friedman
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder has decided that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed will be tried in federal court in New York. Holder's decision was driven by the need for the U.S. government to decide how to dispose of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, a U.S. Naval base outside the boundaries of the United States selected as the camp in which to hold suspected al Qaeda members.
We very carefully use the word "camp" rather than prison or prisoner of war camp. This is because of an ongoing and profound ambiguity not only in U.S. government perceptions of how to define those held there, but also due to uncertainties in international law, particularly with regard to the Geneva Conventions of 1949. Were the U.S. facility at Guantanamo a prison, then its residents would be criminals. If it were a POW camp, then they would be enemy soldiers being held under the rules of war. It has never really been decided which these men are, and therefore their legal standing has remained unclear.
War vs. Criminal Justice
The ambiguity began shortly after 9/11, when then-U.S. President George W. Bush defined two missions: waging a war on terror, and bringing Osama bin Laden and his followers to justice. Both made for good rhetoric. But they also were fundamentally contradictory. A war is not a judicial inquiry, and a criminal investigation is not part of war.
An analogy might be drawn from Pearl Harbor. Imagine that in addition to stating that the United States was at war with Japan, Franklin Roosevelt also called for bringing the individual Japanese pilots who struck Hawaii to justice under American law. This would make no sense. As an act of war, the Japanese action fell under the rules of war as provided for in international law, the U.S. Constitution and the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ). Japanese pilots could not be held individually responsible for the lawful order they received. In the same sense, trying to bring soldiers to trial in a civilian court in the United States would make no sense. Creating a mission in which individual Japanese airmen would be hunted down and tried under the rules of evidence not only would make no sense, it would be impossible. Building a case against them individually also would be impossible. Judges would rule on evidence, on whether an unprejudiced jury could be found, and so on. None of this happened, of course - World War II was a war, not a judicial inquiry.
It is important to consider how wars are conducted. Enemy soldiers are not shot or captured because of what they have done; they are shot and captured because of who they are - members of an enemy military force. War, once launched, is pre-emptive. Soldiers are killed or captured in the course of fighting enemy forces, or even before they have carried out hostile acts. Soldiers are not held responsible for their actions, but neither are they immune to attack just because they have not done anything. Guilt and innocence do not enter into the equation. Certainly, if war crimes are in question, charges may be brought; the UCMJ determines how they will be tried by U.S. forces. Soldiers are tried by courts-martial, not by civilian courts, because of their status as soldiers. Soldiers are tried by a jury of their peers, and their peers are held to be other soldiers.
International law is actually not particularly ambiguous about the status of the members of al Qaeda. The Geneva Conventions do not apply to them because they have not adhered to a fundamental requirement of the Geneva Conventions, namely, identifying themselves as soldiers of an army. Doing so does not mean they must wear a uniform. The postwar Geneva Conventions make room for partisans, something older versions of the conventions did not. A partisan is not a uniformed fighter, but he must wear some form of insignia identifying himself as a soldier to enjoy the conventions' protections. As Article 4.1.6 puts it, prisoners of war include "Inhabitants of a non-occupied territory, who on the approach of the enemy spontaneously take up arms to resist the invading forces, without having had time to form themselves into regular armed units, provided they carry arms openly and respect the laws and customs of war." The Geneva Conventions of 1949 does not mention, nor provide protection to, civilians attacking foreign countries without openly carrying arms.
The reasoning behind this is important. During the Franco-Prussian war, French franc-tireurs fired on Prussian soldiers. Ununiformed and without insignia, they melded into the crowd. It was impossible for the Prussians to distinguish between civilians and soldiers, so they fired on both, and civilian casualties resulted. The framers of the Geneva Conventions held the franc-tireurs, not the Prussian soldiers, responsible for the casualties. Their failure to be in uniform forced the Prussians to defend themselves at the cost of civilian lives. The franc-tireurs were seen as using civilians as camouflage. This was regarded as outside the rules of war, and those who carried out such acts were seen as not protected by the conventions. They were not soldiers, and were not to be treated as such.
An Ambiguous Status
Extending protections to partisans following World War II was seen as a major concession. It was done with concerns that it not be extended so far that combatants of irregular forces could legally operate using their ability to blend in with surrounding civilians, and hence a requirement of wearing armbands. The status of purely covert operatives remained unchanged: They were not protected under the Geneva Conventions. Their status remained ambiguous.
During World War II, it was U.S. Army practice to hold perfunctory trials followed by executions. During the Battle of the Bulge, German commandos captured wearing U.S. uniforms - in violation of the Geneva Conventions - were summarily tried in field courts-martial and executed. The idea that such individuals were to be handed over to civilian courts was never considered. The actions of al Qaeda simply were not anticipated in the Geneva Conventions. And to the extent they were expected, they violated the conventions.
Holder's decision to transfer Khalid Sheikh Mohammed to federal court makes it clear that Mohammed was not a soldier acting in time of war, but a criminal. While during times of war spies are tried as criminals, their status is precarious, particularly if they are members of an enemy army. Enemy soldiers out of uniform carrying out reconnaissance or espionage are subject to military, not civilian, justice, and frequently are executed. A spy captured in the course of collecting information is a civilian, particularly in peacetime, and normally is tried as a criminal with rules of evidence.
Which was Mohammed? Under the Geneva Conventions, his actions in organizing the Sept. 11 attacks, which were carried out without uniforms or other badges of a combatant, denies him status and protection as a POW. Logically, he is therefore a criminal, but if he is, consider the consequences.
Criminal law is focused on punishments meted out after the fact. They rarely have been preventive measures. In either case, they follow strict rules of evidence, require certain treatments of prisoners and so on. For example, prisoners have to be read the Miranda warning. Soldiers are not policeman. They are not trained or expected to protect the legal rights of captives save as POWs under the UCMJ, nor protect the chain of custody of evidence nor countless other things that are required in a civilian court. In criminal law, it is assumed that law enforcement has captured the prisoner and is well-versed in these rules. In this case, the capture was made without any consideration of these matters, nor would one expect such consideration.
Consider further the role of U.S. covert operations in these captures. The United States conducts covert operations in which operatives work out of uniform and are generally not members of the military. Operating outside the United States, they are not protected by U.S. law although they do operate under the laws and regulations promulgated by the U.S. government. Much of their operations run counter to international and national law. At the same time, their operations are accepted as best practices by the international system. Some operate under cover of diplomatic immunity but carry out operations incompatible with their status as diplomats. Others operate without official cover. Should those under unofficial cover be captured, their treatment falls under local law, if such exists. The Geneva Conventions do not apply to them, nor was it intended to.
Spies, saboteurs and terrorists fall outside the realm of international law. This class of actors falls under the category of national law, leaving open the question of their liability if they conduct acts inimical to a third country. Who has jurisdiction? The United States is claiming that Mohammed is to be tried under the criminal code of the United States for actions planned in Afghanistan but carried out by others in the United States. It is a defensible position, but where does this leave American intelligence planners working at CIA headquarters for actions carried out by others in a third country? Are they subject to prosecution in the third country? Those captured in the third country clearly are, but the claim here is that Mohammed is subject to prosecution under U.S. laws for actions carried out by others in the United States. And that creates an interesting reciprocal liability.
A Failure to Evolve
The fact is that international law has not evolved to deal with persons like Mohammed. Or more precisely, most legal discussion under international law is moving counter to the Geneva Conventions' intent, which was to treat the franc-tireurs as unworthy of legal protection because they were not soldiers and were violating the rules of war. International law wants to push Mohammed into a category where he doesn't fit, providing protections that are not apparent under the Geneva Conventions. The United States has shoved him into U.S. criminal law, where he doesn't fit either, unless the United States is prepared to accept reciprocal liability for CIA personnel based in the United States planning and supporting operations in third countries. The United States has never claimed, for example, that the KGB planners who operated agents in the United States on behalf of the Soviet Union were themselves subject to criminal prosecution.
A new variety of warfare has emerged in which treatment as a traditional POW doesn't apply and criminal law doesn't work. Criminal law creates liabilities the United States doesn't want to incur, and it is not geared to deal with a terrorist like Mohammed. U.S. criminal law assumes that capture is in the hands of law enforcement officials. Rights are prescribed and demanded, including having lawyers present and so forth. Such protections are practically and theoretically absurd in this case: Mohammed is not a soldier and he is not a suspected criminal presumed innocent until proven guilty. Law enforcement is not a practical counter to al Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan. A nation cannot move from the rules of counterterrorism to an American courtroom; they are incompatible modes of operation. Nor can a nation use the code of criminal procedures against a terrorist organization operating transnationally. Instead, they must be stopped before they commit their action, and issuing search warrants and allowing attorneys present at questioning is not an option.
Therefore - and now we move to the political reality - it is difficult to imagine how the evidence accumulated against Mohammed could enter a courtroom. Ignoring the methods of questioning, which is a separate issue, how can one prove his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt without compromising sources and methods, and why should one? Mohammed was on a battlefield but not operating as a soldier. Imagine doing criminal forensics on a battlefield to prove the criminal liability of German commandos wearing American uniforms.
In our mind, there is a very real possibility that Mohammed could be found not guilty in a courtroom. The cases of O.J. Simpson and of Jewish Defense League head Rabbi Meir Kahane's killer, El Sayyid Nosair - both found not guilty despite overwhelming evidence - come to mind. Juries do strange things, particularly amid what will be the greatest media circus imaginable in the media capital of the world.
But it may not be the jury that is the problem. A federal judge will have to ask the question of whether prejudicial publicity of such magnitude has occurred that Mohammed can't receive a fair trial. (This is probably true.) Questions will be raised about whether he has received proper legal counsel, which undoubtedly he hasn't. Issues about the chain of custody of evidence will be raised; given that he was held by troops and agents, and not by law enforcement, the chances of compromised evidence is likely. The issue of torture will, of course, also be raised but that really isn't the main problem. How do you try a man under U.S. legal procedures who was captured in a third country by non-law enforcement personnel, and who has been in military custody for seven years?
There is a nontrivial possibility that he will be acquitted or have his case thrown out of court, which would be a foreign policy disaster for the United States. Some might view it as a sign of American adherence to the rule of law and be impressed, others might be convinced that Mohammed was not guilty in more than a legal sense and was held unjustly, and others might think the United States has bungled another matter.
The real problem here is international law, which does not address acts of war committed by non-state actors out of uniform. Or more precisely, it does, but leaves them deliberately in a state of legal limbo, with captors left free to deal with them as they wish. If the international legal community does not like the latter, it is time they did the hard work of defining precisely how a nation deals with an act of war carried out under these circumstances.
The international legal community has been quite vocal in condemning American treatment of POWs after 9/11, but it hasn't evolved international law, even theoretically, to cope with this. Sept. 11 is not a crime in the proper sense of the term, and prosecuting the guilty is not the goal. Instead, it was an act of war carried out outside the confines of the Geneva Conventions. The U.S. goal is destroying al Qaeda so that it can no longer function, not punishing those who have acted. Similarly the goal in 1941 was not punishing the Japanese pilots at Pearl Harbor but destroying the Japanese Empire, and any Japanese soldier was a target who could be killed without trial in the course of combat. If it wishes to solve this problem, international law will have to recognize that al Qaeda committed an act of war, and its destruction has legal sanction without judicial review. And if some sort of protection is to be provided al Qaeda operatives out of uniform, then the Geneva Conventions must be changed, and with it the status of spies and saboteurs of all countries.
Holder has opened up an extraordinarily complex can of worms with this decision. As U.S. attorney general, he has committed himself to proving Mohammed's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt while guaranteeing that his constitutional rights (for a non-U.S. citizen captured and held outside the United States under extraordinary circumstances by individuals not trained as law enforcement personnel, no less) are protected. It is Holder's duty to ensure Mohammed's prosecution, conviction and fair treatment under the law. It is hard to see how he can.
Whatever the politics of this decision - and all such decisions have political dimensions - the real problem faced by both the Obama and Bush administrations has been the failure of international law to evolve to provide guidance on dealing with combatants such as al Qaeda. International law has clung to a model of law governing a very different type of warfare despite new realities. International law must therefore either reaffirm the doctrine that combatants who do not distinguish themselves from noncombatants are not due the protections of international law, or it must clearly define what those protections are. Otherwise, international law discredits itself.
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Then & Now
By Renee DeFranco
Today, many Americans are not as impulsive or careless with their purchases as they've been in the past. They're more willing to trade down in price, even if it means looking beyond their favorite brands, and they certainly think twice before splurging on anything in or near the realm of "luxury." To be sure, brand loyalty isn't out... but the stakes are much higher for those brands striving to keep their loyal following of suddenly-cash-strapped consumers.
Below, we take a look at 10 of our favorite classic, nostalgic brands over the years. For many of us, these brands have helped define our favorite foods, games and pastimes. Some of these products have disappeared, and others have staged a welcome comeback. A few have remained strong and steady over the decades. Read on to see where some of the classics are today.
Cracker Jack
Thanks largely to the seventh-inning stretch song "Take Me Out to the Ball Game," baseball games and Cracker Jack have gone hand in hand since 1908. Today, 500 to 600 bags (no longer boxes) of Cracker Jack are sold at a typical Philadelphia Phillies game, according to a recent New York Times article.
But some teams have had their doubts about Cracker Jack. Take the New York Yankees, which traded the classic brand for another caramel corn, Crunch 'n Munch, in 2004, according to the article. Fans rebelled, and two months later, Cracker Jack was back.
Given the way today's ball park food menus are rapidly expanding, some fear peanuts and Cracker Jack will be beaten out by popular sales of trendier items like sushi and lobster rolls in the future, as noted in the New York Times. Others, however, insist the baseball staple won't be going anywhere anytime soon.
Hydrox Cookies
Another popular food brand hails from the year 1908... the crème-filled sandwich cookies known as Hydrox. Originally manufactured by Sunshine Biscuits, these cookies prefaced the Oreo, which was introduced four years later in 1912. However, the marketing powers of the Nabisco Division of Kraft Foods managed to convince later generations that Oreo was the original cookie sandwich. Not exactly... Behind the marketing clutter, Hyrdox cookies were known to be crispier, cheaper, kosher... and many claimed they "stood up better to milk."
Even after getting off on the wrong foot, a series of acquisitions added to Hydrox cookies' ill fate. In 1996, Keebler snatched up Sunshine Biscuits and its batches of Hydrox. In 1999, Keebler replaced Hydrox with a similar, reformulated product called Droxies. And then, in 2003, two years after Kellogg's swept in and acquired Keebler, Droxies disappeared.
On the cookies' 100th anniversary, Kellogg's resumed distribution of Hydrox cookies under the Sunshine label, shipping batches in late August 2008. Hydrox aficionados petitioned Kellogg's to make Hydrox a permanent product in their portfolio. Nevertheless, Hydrox disappeared again less than a year later. Today, Hydrox exists in a very minimal form -- "Hydrox" cookie crumbs are used as a topping on Carvel ice cream treats. At least one company recognized Hydrox had some staying power.
Tab Soda
Introduced as a cola diet drink in 1963 by the Coca-Cola Co., Tab soda was marketed to people wanting "to keep 'tabs' on their weight." But the soda's ingredients were a recipe for disaster. It was initially sweetened with cyclamate, which was banned by the FDA in 1969. It was then reformulated with saccharin, which the FDA tried to ban in 1977. Though the saccharin ban was rejected, a new label was required that informed consumers of the risk of bladder cancer.
The Tab brand was briefly extended to Tab Lemon-Lime and Tab Orange. But in 1982, after the introduction of Diet Coke (surrounded by all the bells and whistles of a $100 million marketing campaign), Tab's days were numbered. In 1984, Diet Coke was reformulated to include blended saccharin and a small amount of aspartame, which is the way its ingredients stand today.
Today, Tab has a U.S. following of "Tabaholics," buying roughly 3 million cases in 2008, according to a piece by Fortune magazine. As a symbol of the '70s, it has also made appearances in "Austin Powers" and "That 70s Show," Fortune notes.
Bazooka Bubble Gum
Topps Co., based in Brooklyn, N.Y., first marketed Bazooka, packaged in a patriotic red, white and blue wrapping, shortly after World War II. In 1953, Topps added small comic strips featuring the "Bazooka Joe" character. Though the bubble gum remained virtually unchanged for over 50 years, it has dwindled in popularity. Nevertheless, "Bazooka Joe" is staging a comeback in Michael Eisner's planned feature-film adaptation of the bubble gum and its comic-strip cast of characters. Film plans were first announced in May 2009.
The Ground Round
This popular restaurant chain first opened in 1969 by Howard Johnson's Inc. It was "the original 'no rules' place," according to its corporate website. Its limited menu had only 12 items, including burgers, snack food and pitchers of beer. Ground Round featured cartoons and Little Rascals episodes on big-screen TVs, served endless amounts of popcorn and peanuts, and even encouraged patrons to toss the peanut shells on the floor.However, management was late to realize that these shells were flammable... until the floors of two locations -- Yonkers, N.Y., and York, Pa. -- caught fire on two separate occasions, killing one patron and injuring many others.
On a lighter note, the restaurant encouraged children to weigh themselves before eating, allowing parents to pay a penny for each pound their kid weighed -- making the restaurant a big hit among cost-conscious families. Overselling by parent company Howard Johnson's led to the franchise's near collapse in the late 1980s. In 2004, Ground Round changed its ownership structure after financial struggles.
Today, with fewer than 50 franchises in 19 states, there's concern the chain may eventually be bought out. But these restaurants are a far cry from the original Ground Rounds. In today's Ground Rounds, rules do apply... you won't spot a peanut shell on the floor and kids, unfortunately, can no longer eat for pennies.
Legos
The Lego Group, a privately held company based in Billund, Denmark, originally designed the colorful line of interlocking bricks known as Legos in the 1940s. The company name "Lego," coined by Danish carpenter Ole Kirk Christiansen, came from the Danish phrase "leg godt," which means "play well."
Legos slowly gained popularity over the years, though the toy sets were first rejected by retailers in fear that plastic toys would never replace wooden ones. Retailers soon discovered they were wrong in this regard. Lego pieces of all varieties are part of a universal system; despite some changes in design, those made in 1958 will still interlock with those made in 2009. They have also spawned a subculture of Lego movies, games, competitions and four Lego-themed amusement parks.
Though the brand has had some challenges over the years -- for example, in 2004, losses totaled nearly $300 million, according to an Ad Age article -- it has continued to bounce back. Lego sales spiked 18 percent in 2008 and, in the first half of 2009, were up 23 percent. Lego toys, particularly Lego Star Wars, are expected to top the charts in toy sales this holiday season. What's more? The much-anticipated Lego Universe will launch in 2010.
Silly Putty
More than 300 million eggs -- or 4,500 tons -- of Silly Putty have been sold since the toy's debut in 1950. The idea began when, in the midst of World War II, the Japanese continued to invade rubber producing countries in the Far East, cutting off supply to the U.S. This took a toll on production efforts, particularly for truck tires and boots. As a result, the government's War Production Board challenged the American industry to attempt to develop a synthetic rubber compound.
In 1943, James Wright, an engineer working for General Electric Co., in New Haven, Conn., combined boric acid and silicone oil, which created bouncing putty. GE was determined to find a use for this putty and sent samples to engineers worldwide, though no practical application was discovered.
In 1949, the owner of a toy store in New Haven, Conn., decided that the material should be marketed and sold as a toy. Today, Silly Putty has a Crayola-owned trademark. Arguably the product's most noteworthy achievement: In 1968, Silly Putty reached the moon, when Apollo 8 astronauts used the substance to secure their tools in zero-gravity.
Mr. Potato Head
Brooklyn, N.Y.-based inventor and designer George Lerner created the first precursor of Mr. Potato Head in 1949, using fruits and vegetables. Though the toy was rejected by many companies that deemed the use of food items for toys as wasteful, Lerner eventually convinced a breakfast cereal company to include plastic versions of the toy in their boxes.
In 1952, Hasbro purchased the toy, giving Lerner a $500 cash advance and a royalty of 5 percent of every kit sold. It was then dubbed Mr. Potato Head and went on to become the very first toy advertised on TV. The toy at first only included plastic parts to add to a potato or vegetable, but a plastic Mr. Potato Head was added to the kit in 1964. The size of Mr. Potato Head doubled in 1975, in order to adhere to child safety regulations introduced by the U.S. government.
In 2006, Hasbro began selling individual themed sets to add to Mr. Potato Head, including Mermaid, Rockstar and Santa Claus. Thanks to Mr. Potato Head's steady development of physical and personality traits over the years, it has managed to keep a captive audience.
Monopoly
Monopoly, sold in 103 countries and produced in 37 languages, is the best-selling board game in the world. It was created in 1934, in the height of the Great Depression, by Charles B. Darrow of Germantown, Pa. The game was originally rejected by Parker Brothers because of "52 design errors." However, Darrow went ahead on his own, making 5,000 homemade games and selling them through a Philadelphia department store. As demand grew, he went back to Parker Brothers, which then bought the game.
Today, Monopoly continues to be a favorite pastime around the world, and many special editions have been made. The most expensive Monopoly game to date, crafted with diamonds, rubies, sapphires and 23k gold, is worth $2 million. As for the longest Monopoly game... it lasted a total of 70 days.
McDonald's Fried Apple Pie
McDonald's deep-fried apple in a cardboard box first emerged in the late '60s and developed a huge following over the years. Its crispy texture and the too-good-to-pass-up 2 for $1 deal made the pie a big hit. But amid concerns that the apple filling was much too hot and posed the risk of burning customers, McDonald's Corp. phased out the pies in 1992. Its replacement: a healthier, less scolding-hot baked apple pie.
Unconfirmed rumors have circulated that McDonald's fried apple pies still exist in some locations in the U.S. and abroad, and now, another restaurant-chain is selling fried apple pies, 2 for $1. Let's see how long these stay on the menu at KFC.
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By Dan Cook, Reuters
PORTLAND, Oregon - The United States' first marijuana cafe opened on Friday, posing an early test of the Obama administration's move to relax policing of medical use of the drug.
The Cannabis Cafe in Portland, Oregon, is the first to give certified medical marijuana users a place to get hold of the drug and smoke it -- as long as they are out of public view -- despite a federal ban.
"This club represents personal freedom, finally, for our members," said Madeline Martinez, Oregon's executive director of NORML, a group pushing for marijuana legalization.
"Our plans go beyond serving food and marijuana," said Martinez. "We hope to have classes, seminars, even a Cannabis Community College, based here to help people learn about growing and other uses for cannabis."
The cafe -- in a two-story building which formerly housed a speak-easy and adult erotic club Rumpspankers -- is technically a private club, but is open to any Oregon residents who are NORML members and hold an official medical marijuana card.
Members pay $25 per month to use the 100-person capacity cafe. They don't buy marijuana, but get it free over the counter from "budtenders". Open 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., it serves food but has no liquor license.
There are about 21,000 patients registered to use marijuana for medical purposes in Oregon. Doctors have prescribed marijuana for a host of illnesses, including Alzheimer's, diabetes, multiple sclerosis and Tourette's syndrome.
On opening day, reporters invited to the cafe could smell, but were not allowed to see, people smoking marijuana.
"I still run a coffee shop and events venue, just like I did before we converted it to the Cannabis Cafe, but now it will be cannabis-themed," said Eric Solomon, the owner of the cafe, who is looking forward to holding marijuana-themed weddings, film festivals and dances in the second-floor ballroom.
NO PROSECUTION
The creation of the cafe comes almost a month after the Obama administration told federal attorneys not to prosecute patients who use marijuana for medical reasons or dispensaries in states which have legalized them.
About a dozen states, including Oregon, followed California's 1996 move to adopt medical marijuana laws, allowing the drug to be cultivated and sold for medical use. A similar number have pending legislation or ballot measures planned.
Pot cafes, known as "coffee shops", are popular in the Dutch city of Amsterdam, where possession of small amounts of marijuana is legal. Portland's Cannabis Cafe is the first of its kind to open in the United States, according to NORML.
Growing, possessing, distributing and smoking marijuana are still illegal under U.S. federal law, which makes no distinction between medical and recreational use.
Federal and local law enforcement agencies did not return phone calls from Reuters on Friday seeking comment on the Portland cafe's operations.
"To have a place that is this open about its activities, where people can come together and smoke -- I say that's pretty amazing." said Tim Pate, a longtime NORML member, at the cafe.
Some locals are hoping it might even be good for business.
"I know some neighbors are pretty negative about this place opening up," said David Bell, who works at a boutique that shares space with the cafe. "But I'm withholding judgment. There's no precedent for it. We don't know what to expect. But it would great if it brought some customers into our store."
(Writing by Bill Rigby; editing by Mohammad Zargham)
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.....................for Wal-Mart, Target and More
By Renee DeFranco
Earlier this week, we shared a list of the best Black Friday sites. These online hubs reveal the latest deals, discounts and even "unconfirmed" rumors of what "might possibly" be available.
We suppose we were on to something... Today, one of the sites on our list actually leaked Target's Black Friday ad. To get in on the latest deals, check out GottaDeal.com.
What kinds of enticing promotions await Target shoppers? Day-after-Thanksgiving deals include 32-inch LCD HDTVs for just $249, $3 toasters and coffeemakers (yes, you read that correctly) and 50 percent off select toys. The store is also offering a $10 gift card for every $100 spent between 5 a.m. and noon. Sounds like something you might want to know and plan for in advance.
Target is not alone. One of Wal-Mart's Black Friday deals has also been leaked, according to recent online reports. The retail giant will offer the AT&T Curve 8310 and Sprint's Curve 8330 for free. AT&T's Bold 9000 will be discounted to $78.88. Other smart phones, including T-Mobile's Curve 8520 and its Pearl 8120 Black Emerald, will be available for just $28.88. Offers include a two-year contract.
Best Buy's bargains were also leaked today. Check out Electronista's post about the electronics giant's many deals to come.
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| Glenn Beck's "The Christmas Sweater-A Return to Redemption...LIVE" will be at Springfield's Showplace 12 Theaters on December 3rd. NewsRadio WTAX will give you a chance to win tickets to the show, stay tuned. Meanwhile, you can purchase tickets at fandango.com. | ||
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