Karis Way

Random thoughts from Eagan, Minn.

Tuesday, May 31, 2005

More About 'Deep Throat'

Furthermore, Didn't LBJ Arrange the Killing of JFK?

Monday, May 30, 2005

Norway Knows a Lot That We Do Not Know?

Credit Card Rip-off

Below are the account fees, rates, costs, limitations, available credit and other terms for a credit card from the First Premier Bank of Sioux Falls, SD:

Annual Percentage Rate for Purchases 9.9%

Other Annual Percentage Rates:

APR for Cash Advances 19.9%

Penalty APR 19.9% for Purchases. Penalty Pricing Information: If your Account goes past the due date two times in any six month period or goes past the due date for two consecutive billing cycles the APR will increase to 19.9%. The APR will be reduced back to 9.9% if the Account is kept current for 3 consecutive months or is paid in full.

Fees for Issuance or Availability of Credit Account Set-up Fee: $29.00 (one-time fee).

Program Fee: $95.00 (one-time fee).

Annual Fee: $48.00.

Participation Fee: $72.00 Annually. (The Participation Fee of $72.00 will be billed at $6.00 per month.)

Additional Card Fee: $20.00 Annually per card, (if applicable).

Transaction Fee for Cash Advances: Greater of $5.00 or 3% of the amount of the cash advance.

Late Payment Fee: $25.

Over Limit Fee: $25.

Monthly Account Maintenance Fee: $3 per month on closed accounts with an outstanding balance of $20 or more.

Transaction Fee for Purchases in Foreign Currency: 1.0% of the transaction amount.

Other Charges:

Credit Limit Increase Fee: Each time your Account is eligible and approved for a credit limit increase, a $25.00 fee is imposed.

Internet Access Fee: $3.95.

Copying Fee: $3.00 per item.

Additional Fees:

Return Item Charge: $25.00.

Autodraft Fee: We impose an $11.00 charge for each payment made through an autodraft service we provide. Autodraft payments requested through our automated systems (i.e. Voice Response or Internet) are assessed $7.00 per transaction.

Express Delivery Fee: We impose a $25.00 fee for the express delivery of your Card(s) sent Priority 2-day airmail. This service is available only on lost, stolen or replacement cards.

Stuffed Animals

I heard a doctor on the radio talking about how children are allergic to their stuffed animals, probably because of dust mites. He said that once a month a stuffed animal should be put in a plastic bag and put in the freezer overnight.

Saturday, May 28, 2005

More About Reporters' Confidential Sources of Information

World War II Has Ended?

This story is in today's issue of The Scotsman, published in Edinburgh:

Japanese soldiers' 60 years in the jungle

JULIAN RYALL

IN TOKYO

TWO men claimed to be Japanese soldiers who refused to surrender at the end of the Second World War could finally return home, 60 years later, after they were found living in the hills of a Philippine island.

The soldiers, identified as Yoshio Yamakawa, 87, from Osaka, and Tsuzuki Nakauchi, 83, from Kochi, apparently want to lay down their weapons - or what remains of them.

The two former members of the Imperial Japanese Army are believed to have spent the last six decades living in remote hills in the south of the Philippine island of Mindanao.

They were due to meet Japanese diplomats yesterday who had hoped to verify their identities. But the meeting in the port town of General Santos was delayed by an intermediary until today after the island was besieged by local media after the story of the men's discovery appeared in the Japanese press.

The meeting was being arranged by a member of a group that has been trying to trace wartime stragglers for more than a decade.

Partly proud and partly shocked, Japan is trying to comprehend the 60 years of hardship that the two former members of the army's 30th Division must have endured before finally emerging.

"I am sure that Japanese people will be very proud of these two men and what they have experienced, and I know that is how my father is feeling," said Kazuhiko Terashima, whose father heads the group trying to track down stray soldiers across the Philippines.

Yoshihiko Terashima, 84, was himself stationed in the islands at the end of the war and was with a small group of soldiers who evaded the American forces in 1945 and continued fighting for another five years before finally surrendering.

Members of his group phoned him from Mindanao on Thursday evening to tell him that the two men had said they wanted to come home.

"For men in their eighties, it would have been very difficult to live and they have shown great spirit," Kazuhiko Terashima said. "The Japanese people will recognise that.

"Perhaps younger people are not so interested in their story, but I'm sure that people in their fifties and older will want to know their thoughts and feelings," he said.

Mr Terashima expects that in about a month the two veterans to be allowed to travel back home - to a country they will not recognise as the Japan of six decades ago.

Reports of the men's experiences are sketchy and in part contradictory, with Mr Terashima suggesting his group had been led to the men's camp by members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, who are also living a jungle existence as they battle with the Philippine army. Another report had one of the men married to a local woman.

Officials in Japan confirmed that both men are listed here as missing, presumed dead.

If they do turn out to be veterans of the conflict - and they are reportedly still in possession of documents that prove their identities - then the achievements of the last men to hold out against the end of the conflict pale into virtual insignificance.

Another war veteran, Shoichi Yokoi, survived undetected in the jungles of Guam for 26 years before returning to Japan in 1972.

And Lieutenant Hiroo Onoda was found hiding in the jungle of Lubang, also in the Philippines, in 1974, 30 years after being stationed there as an army intelligence officer. Told to continue guerrilla warfare against the Americans as the war drew to a close, he survived on coconuts and bananas and later told interviewers that he evaded "enemy patrols" that were actually search parties.

In his book, No Surrender: My Thirty-Year War, Mr Onoda told of being summoned by his senior officer in December 1944 and given his orders.

"You are absolutely forbidden to die by your own hand," Major Yoshimi Taniguchi told him. "It may take three years, it may take five, but whatever happens, we will come back for you. Until then, so long as you have one soldier, you are to continue to lead him."

Lt Onoda followed his orders to the absolute letter and led a group of four men, disregarding as Allied propaganda the leaflets dropped over the jungle claiming the war had ended.

Newspapers were left in the open telling of the end of the war, and friends and relatives made announcements over loudspeakers into the jungle, all to no avail.

One of the four men finally ran away in 1949 and surrendered to the authorities, while another man was shot dead in 1954 in a skirmish with locals . Lt Onoda's last remaining colleague was killed in 1972.

Two years later, Major Taniguchi was located in Japan and travelled to the Philippines, where he waited at a spot in the jungle for Lt Onoda. After Major Taniguchi read out the order to cease all combat activity and that the war was over, Lt Onoda was unable to grasp the news.

"We really lost the war?" was his first response, he wrote in his memoirs. "How could they have been so sloppy?"

After returning to Japan, he found it impossible to adapt to the country and moved to Brazil where he ran a cattle farm. He later returned to Japan and set up an outward-bounds camp for children.
Mr Yamakawa and Mr Nakauchi will inevitably suffer similar problems adjusting to life in Japan, but they are sure of a warm welcome.

"These two soldiers kept to the rules laid down for Japanese soldiers for 60 years and have shown the incredible spirit of soldiers," said Mitsuhiro Kimura, director of the right-wing group Issuikai, which means One Water Society.

"They have been brave and strong and inside their minds they have been able to think like soldiers for such a long time. When they return to Japan, I am sure that many people will go to Narita airport to welcome them," he said. "They have stayed true to their army functions and the Japanese people will respect them for that."

Others agreed that the pair are likely to be met by large crowds on their return, but for a different reason.

"Yes, I agree that there will be many people there, but I don't think they will be there to welcome them back; it will be more curiosity to see what they look like for themselves," said Kensuke Ebata, a defence analyst. He added that many questions need to be answered about whether the two men were aware the war had ended and opted to remain in the Philippines of their own free will.

Wednesday, May 25, 2005

Are Voters Tired of Conservatism?

I have not heard anything recently about placing Ronald Reagan on Mt. Rushmore.

Food Fight in the Big Tent - Newsweek Politics - MSNBC.com

'Operation Spam Zombies'

Monday, May 23, 2005

Bloggers, Pawlenty hobnob

Sunday, May 22, 2005

Blogger News Network

Friday, May 20, 2005

Abuse of Children

Thursday, May 19, 2005

Doug Grow's Column About Arthur Naftalin

A very interesting column about Arthur Naftalin. (A detail: Doug Grow said Naftalin died at age 84; yesterday's obituary said Naftalin was 87.)

Doug Grow: Naftalin 'didn't understand how good he was'

Arthur Naftalin

In September 1952, it was Fall Quarter at the University of Minnesota. I was an incoming freshman, and one of my classes was political science taught by Prof. Arthur Naftalin. He was an outstanding lecturer (and it was quite clear that he was a DFLer). It was a presidential election year: Adlai Stevenson vs. Dwight Eisenhower. On the morning after the election, when Prof. Naftalin announced that Eisenhower was elected, there was a loud cheer from the students.

Naftalin, former Minneapolis mayor, dies at 87

Wednesday, May 18, 2005

Crime Does Not Pay

Monday, May 16, 2005

Newsweek Retracts

White House Says Newsweek Needs to Do More Than Apologize

Newsweek Apologizes

Sunday, May 15, 2005

Joyce Meyer Ministries

Thursday, May 12, 2005

What's Up, Pussycat? Whoa! - New York Times

Quote from one of the owners: "I don't really approve of what I've done, but the beauty takes my breath away."

What's Up, Pussycat? Whoa! - New York Times

Wednesday, May 11, 2005

Tut! Tut!

Tuesday, May 10, 2005

Ovarian Cancer (Again)

This news story appeared in The Scotsman, published in Edinburgh, Scotland.

Scotsman.com News - Top Stories - Blood test could save lives of thousands of women

Ovarian Cancer

Thursday, May 05, 2005

I hate the word "arguably"