thought about it. and isn t it the thought that counts? the wall street journal has just reported that the doj made that decision for two reasons one, because biden s attorneys were being good old boys and girls and, quote: cooperating and, two, they wanted to avoid complicating the investigation. now, why does biden get to search his own classified records while donald trump gets his house raided by the feds? legal scholar jonathan turley makes the most sense of it saying, quote: the president has a host of people who regularly handle classified material so why use the lawyers? the answer appears the same as in the case of hillary clinton s email control. hillary clinton can erase 33,000 emails and joe biden can move these documents around. it s what the democrats do. they control what gets out to the public. and it s why we re only finding out about this now three months after the first batch of documents were found in joe biden s chinese funded think tank. now, if this h
SOUTHAMPTON Sometime this summer, John Workman will finally get a full night’s sleep.But until then, the longtime firefighter and Southampton fire chief for the last decade will continue to keep one ear open to the radio for calls, just like he’s.
It was 36-years-ago today (November 8th, 1986) that Boston's comeback hit, "Amanda" the lead single from Third Stage, hit Number One. The song, which was the band's first single since 1978, was written in 1980 and in 1984 a poor-sounding studio demo of the track briefly became the most requested AOR tune on the airwaves before a cease and desist letter had it pulled off the air. The song, which topped the tracks for two weeks, hit Number One while Third Stage was sitting on top of the Billboard 200 albums chart during its month-long run. Amazingly, despite it being the height of MTV, no video was prepared for "Amanda," which was written by band leader Tom Scholz. Third Stage saw the reunion of Boston co-founders Brad Delp and Tom Scholz. Delp left Scholz and Boston following the release of the band's second album, 1978's Don't Look Back, and he spent a few years working with former Boston guitarist Barry Goudreau on a number of projects, i