Democrat Barack Obama accused rival Hillary Rodham Clinton on Friday of trying to "play on people's fears to scare up votes" with a television ad showing sleeping children and asking who would be more qualified to answer a national security emergency call at 3 a.m.
Baker †Adrian’s Terra Rust connected on a game-winning 3-point basket with 50 seconds remaining and the Antelopes also used a little bit of luck down the stretch to hold off Sherman 60-59 in consolation round action of the 1A girls state basketball tournament Thursday in Baker.
Democrat Barack Obama accused rival Hillary Rodham Clinton on Friday of trying to "play on people's fears to scare up votes" with a television ad showing sleeping children and asking who would be more qualified to answer a national security emergency call at 3 a.m. "The question is not about picking up the phone. The question is: What kind of judgment will you make when you answer?" Obama said
A man accused of killing his wife in New Zealand and then abandoning the couple's 3-year-old daughter at an Australian train station has been captured in suburban Atlanta, authorities said.
There certainly are high hopes resting on the initial public offering of credit card giant Visa Inc. The stock is expected to start trading March 19 or 20 under the proposed symbol V, at anywhere from $37 to $42 a share. With 406 million shares being offered, and an option for underwriters to peddle
LENOX It may take a miracle to save Edith Wharton's estate, The Mount, from foreclosure by Berkshire Bank. The national landmark †listed as a project of the public-private partnership Save America's Treasures †is drowning in a geyser of red ink totaling about $9 million †substantially more than previously reported.
HOUSTON (AP) - Democrat Barack Obama accused his rival Hillary Rodham Clinton on Friday of trying to "scare up votes" with a television ad showing sleeping children and asking who would be more qualified to answer a national security emergency call at 3 a.m.
A bitter row erupted Friday as Democrat Barack Obama accused Hillary Clinton of scare tactics over a provocative presidential campaign ad hinting he was too inexperienced to protect US kids.
With the Texas primary just four days away, Obama said "the question is not who you want to pick up the call. The question is what kind of judgment will you exercise when you pick up that phone."
HOUSTON – With Hillary Rodham Clinton airing ads in Texas meant to raise anxieties about Barack Obama's readiness in a crisis – dramatizing the issue with a focus on the hypothetical 3 a.m. phone call a president might get – the Obama side hit back Friday morning, saying it's more important what a president says in the wee hours than what he or she did in previous decades.