The Salt Lake Tribune
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
How 'great' were they?
Spotted on the electronic readerboard at Cottonwood High School: The message "Thank You for 8 Great Years," with a photo of a smiling George W. Bush.

Not everyone would agree the last eight years were so great. Fifty-eight percent of the country think Bush will go down in history as a "below average" or "poor" president.

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Thursday, December 18, 2008
Redford takes on the BLM
Robert Redford has put his considerable celebrity behind a federal lawsuit to stop the lame-duck Bush administration from selling off oil and gas leases near Utah's red-rock national parks.

As reported by Matt Canham, one of The Salt Lake Tribune's Washington correspondents, the lawsuit - announced in a D.C. press conference Wednesday - challenges 80 leases that go up for sale Friday.

Redford - participating in the press conference via satellite from L.A. - called the Bush administration "morally criminal" for announcing the sale on Election Day, a day Americans voted to reject Bush policies.

"No place on earth can speak to the balance of beauty and nature like these areas," Redford said.

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Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Hatch and the rapper
Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch spoke up for a Grammy-winning rapper doing a 14-year drug sentence - a man who will be freed by Christmas, after President George W. Bush commuted his sentence this week.

John Edward Forte had recorded his own rap CDs, and was a producer for the Fugees. According to this Washington Post account, Forte was arrested in 2000 in Newark International Airport with two briefcases containing 31 pounds of liquid cocaine. A first-time offender, the 33-year-old Forte received a minimum prison sentence of 14 years.

Thanks to the commutation, Forte (whose supporters have maintained a web site calling for his freedom) will be released from prison at Fort Dix, N.J., on Dec. 22 - though he will continue to serve five years' probation.

Hatch and singer Carly Simon were among those who advocated leniency for Forte. In a January 2007 letter to Bush, Hatch wrote, "Now is the perfect opportunity for John to be given the chance to provide positive benefits to society through his considerable musical talents."

UPDATE: The Tribune's Robert Gehrke filed this excellent account of how Hatch, via Carly Simon, got involved in Forte's case.

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Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Give or take 24 years

(Top photo: Apple Computer ad; bottom photo: Mike Segar/Reuters)

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