The
baling machine filled with the shredded newspapers.
Monthly
Statement:
September
2005
New York Times Headlines
1st Bush Sees Long Recovery for New Orleans; 30,000 Troops
in Largest U.S. Relief Effort
2nd Despair and Lawnessness Grip New Orleans as Thousands
Remain Stranded in Squalor
3rd More Troops and Aid Reach New Orleans; Bush Visits Area;
Chaotic Exodus Continues
4th Chief Justice Renquist Dies at 80
5th New Orleans Begins a Search for its Dead
6th President Names Roberts as Choice for Chief Justice
7th Flooding Recedes in New Orleans; U.S. Inquiry Is Set
8th Forced Evacuation of a Battered New Orleans Begins
9th Cost of Recovery Surges, as do Bids to Join in Effort
10th Director of Fema Stripped of Role as Relief Leader
11th Breakdowns Marked Path from Hurricane to Anarchy
12th President Visits as New Orleans Sees some Gains
13th Roberts Pledges He’ll Hear Cases with ‘Open
Mind’
14th President Says He’s Responsible in Storm Lapses
15th Multiple Attacks Kill nearly 150 in Iraqi Capital
16th Bush Pledges Federal Role in Rebuilding Gulf Coast
17th Fema, Slow to the Rescue, Now Stumbles in Aid Effort
18th Business Owners Start to Return to New Orleans
19th North Korea Says it Will Abandon Nuclear Efforts
20th Mayor Suspends Flow of People to New Orleans
21st Residents Leave Gulf Coast Area as Storm Grows
22nd Vatican Expected to Exclude Gays as New Priests
23rd Panel Approves Roberts, 13 - 5, as 3 of 8 Democrats Back
Him
24th Storm Lashes Coast; Levees Breached in New Orleans
25th Hurricane Slams Into Gulf Coast; Flooding Spreads
26th Many Contracts for Storm Work Raise Questions
27th To Conserve Gas, President Calls for Less Driving
28th When Storm Hit, National Guard Was Deluged Too
29th Delay Is Indicted in Texas Case and Forfeits G.O.P. House
Post
30th Senate Confirms Roberts as 17th Chief Justice
Process:
I subscribe to the New York Times and read it daily. The only
unusual aspect of my interactions with the Times is in what
happens after it has been read. It is never thrown away -
each paper is kept, in its entirety, until the end of the
month when the full month's newspapers are shredded, baled,
and labeled.
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