President George W. Bush held a news conference
down at the ranch in Crawford, Texas, and again defended his
plan to use military courts to try terrorism
suspects: "One thing is for certain," he said, "whatever the procedures
are
for the military tribunals, our system will be
more fair than the system of bin Laden and the Taliban."
A reporter asked the President whether the events
of the last year had changed him.
"Talk to my wife," he replied. "I don't spend
a lot of time looking in the mirror, except when I comb my hair."
A Pakistani newspaper reported that Osama bin
Laden had died "a peaceful, natural death" near Tora Bora
from a "serious lung complication." An Afghan
functionary said that bin Laden had escaped to Pakistan and
was under the protection of the extremist Jamiat-e-Ulema-i-Islam
party. American officials dismissed the claims,
preferring to believe that the Evil One had died
of unnatural causes in a cave somewhere.
French police insisted that they had made no mistakes
when they allowed Richard Reid, the "shoe bomber,"
to board his flight to America. "We made no error
at any stage," a police official said. "And we did everything we could."
The United States Department of Transportation
announced that it would allow current baggage and passenger screeners
to stay on the job, even if they lack high school
diplomas, when the government takes over security for American airports.
A passenger in Memphis, Tennessee, was arrested
when he attempted to board a Delta Airlines flight with
a loaded 9-millimeter pistol in his carry-on
bag; the man had successfully boarded two previous flights before
the gun was found in a random search.
Two English journalists somehow managed to smuggle
a miniature cleaver, a four-inch dagger,
and a three-inch stiletto onto a British Airways
flight at Heathrow Airport.
In a fit of road rage, an Italian driver bit the little finger off a cyclist who scratched his car.
American B-52s started bombing Afghanistan again.
Afghan villagers were still digging through rubble
looking for their dead children.
India deployed short-range ballistic missiles,
which are capable of carrying a nuclear warhead
and have a range of 150 miles, along its border
with Pakistan as both countries prepared for war.
School officials in Boulder, Colorado, were planning to exterminate a colony of prairie dogs.
People in Minneapolis, Minnesota, were still bickering
over the wisdom of putting up a statue
of Mary Tyler Moore throwing her hat in the air.
Members of Christ Community Church in Alamogordo,
New Mexico, burned hundreds of Harry Potter books.
"These books encourage our youth to learn more
about witches, warlocks, and sorcerers," declared Pastor
Jack Brock, "and those things are an abomination
to God and to me."
Geraldo Rivera declared that "the time has come
to stop the Geraldo-bashing" after he was criticized for his "honest mistake"
of claiming that he was at the site of a friendly-fire
incident in Afghanistan when he was in fact hundreds of miles away.
Marisa Tomei, the actress, insisted that her cat was psychic.
A Kentucky meatpacker owned by Tyson Foods recalled
250,000 pounds of ham after it was discovered
that a disgruntled worker had packed the ham
with nails.
Anchor Food Products — the world's largest producer
of frozen French fries, whose motto is "One World. One Fry."
— shut down its frozen-onion-rings factory in
Pecos, Texas, eliminating 700 jobs, 10 percent of the town's workforce.
It was reported that corporate America laid off 1 million workers last year.
A legless man in a wheelchair stole 10 pairs of pants from a Gap store in Vancouver.
Farmers in Thailand started an organization to promote the use of dried cattle dung; Sarawut Supalaksuksakorn, a spokesman for the group, pointed out that the 38,500 cattle in the Sikhoraphum district produce 197,000 kilograms of dung every day.
Australian officials were investigating whether sewage could be recycled as drinking water.
The United States Forest Service approved a large
mine, which will produce 10,000 tons of copper and silver a day
for 35 years, in a Montana wilderness area that
provides habitat for protected bull trout and a population of grizzly bears.
A smoker in Romania used 7,000 cigarette packs to construct his own coffin.
The American Red Cross was running low on blood.
Sydney, Australia, was surrounded by wildfires, many of which were deliberately set.
Hundreds of people burned up in Lima, Peru, after
someone lit a firecracker and started a chain reaction of
explosions among illegal fireworks stands, destroying
a four-block area of a downtown historic district.
Members of Abu Sayyaf, a small Muslim insurgency
in the Philippines, were said to enjoy taunting
government troops with cellphone text messages.
A rap version of the New Testament was doing well in France, where it has sold 140,000 copies.
Israeli peace advocates delivered two tons of
food and clothing to Beit Umar, a Palestinian village in
the West Bank that has been cut off by Israel's
military blockade for more than a year.
Israel's supreme court rejected Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's choice for antiterrorism adviser because the nominee, Ehud Yatom, a former Shin Bet agent, once used rocks to crush the skulls of two Palestinian prisoners who had hijacked a bus.
(In America, the Democrats would confirm this nutjob in a heartbeat.)
Prime Minister Hun Sen of Cambodia expanded his
crackdown on vice by declaring war on karaoke:
"If we know of any karaoke parlor still open,
we will close it immediately and take tanks to knock it down."
President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa called for an end to child rape.
President Leonid Kuchma of Ukraine declared a
national day of celebration to commemorate the creation
of the first Soviet computer on December 31,
1951.
The Queen of Denmark cracked her ribs.
Prime Minister Tony Blair of England witnessed
the discovery of a mummy in Egypt
and was cursed to be eaten by a crocodile, a
lion, or a hippo.
—Roger D. Hodge
From Harper's Magazine Foundation.