National Missing Children's Day, 2003
By the President of the United States of America
A Proclamation On National Missing Children's Day, we join with families, lawenforcement officials, and child advocates to highlight our commitmentto stopping the abduction and exploitation of children. During thisyear's observance, we celebrate the progress we have made insafeguarding children, and we renew our dedication to protecting ourmost vulnerable citizens and our most valuable resources. The Department of Justice estimates that more than 50,000 childrenwill be victims of nonfamily abductions each year. While the rate ofrecovery in such kidnappings is approximately 99 percent, the trauma ofabduction affects far too many. No young person in America should everknow the terror of abduction, and no family should ever have toexperience the nightmare of having a loved one suddenly taken. The safety and well-being of our children is a sharedresponsibility for all Americans and for Federal, State, and localauthorities. My Administration is making the prevention andinvestigation of child abductions a top priority. We are working touse available resources to educate our citizens about how to preventchild abductions. We are also creating new lines of communicationbetween authorities and the public to help find and safely returnmissing children to their families. We will continue to vigorouslyprosecute and severely punish those who would harm our children. To further these efforts, in August 2002, my Administrationreleased a new guidebook, "Personal Safety for Children: A Guide forParents" to teach parents steps to improve their children's safety.Since then, copies have been distributed to public and private schoolsand public libraries throughout the country, in both English andSpanish. In October 2002, I convened the first White House Conferenceon Missing, Exploited, and Runaway Children to promote public awarenessof the issues and to generate recommendations and best practices fromexperts. And in December 2002, I signed legislation creating the DotKids domain, a child-friendly zone on the Internet. The sites on thisdomain are monitored for content and safety, offering parents peace ofmind knowing that their children can learn in a safe and healthyenvironment. Last month I signed the PROTECT Act, an important law that providesvaluable new ways to deter, investigate, prosecute, and punish crimesagainst America's children. The PROTECT Act also builds on myAdministration's ongoing efforts to expand and improve the AMBER Alertprogram, which has become an increasingly important tool to help rescue kidnapped children by quickly gettingkey information about the missing child and the suspect to the public.This law formally establishes the Federal Government's role in theAMBER Alert system and equips the Department of Justice to help Stateand local officials develop, enhance, and coordinate AMBER plans acrossAmerica. Our Nation has come to know the names and faces of far too manychildren because they have been the victims of acts of cruelty andviolence. These crimes break our hearts and stir our anger. OurNation shares the joy of the parents who are reunited with theirchildren, and prays with those who are still hoping and waiting. Wegrieve with every family that has suffered the loss of or injury to achild. We will continue the fight against the threats that ourchildren face. NOW, THEREFORE, I, GEORGE W. BUSH, President of the United Statesof America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitutionand laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim May 25, 2003, asNational Missing Children's Day. I call upon Americans to join me incommemorating this observance by celebrating those children who havebeen returned to their loved ones, remembering those young people whoare missing, and continuing to work together on every front to protectour children from those who would seek to harm them. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twenty-thirdday of May, in the year of our Lord two thousand three, and of theIndependence of the United States of America the two hundred andtwenty-seventh. GEORGE W. BUSH# # #
Officials confirmed a body found in an SUV that was submerged in a Pennsylvania creek is James Amabile, who had been missing since 2003. The SUV and body were discovered earlier in March by a group of YouTube volunteer divers who have helped crack cold cases around the country.
When the vehicle was first discovered, Ridley Township police noted that the license plate number matched that of Amabile's missing SUV, but a proper identification of the remains had not yet been made.
"When we discovered that vehicle, there was a pylon that had been drilled right through the front end of this vehicle. I had never seen anything like this, completely blew my mind," Bishop said in a YouTube video.
"This is something that we've been investigating for a long time," Ridley Township Police Captain James Dougherty said. "It wasn't just the initial missing person. It was following a lot of leads over the years, following a lot of different theories as far as the whereabouts of the missing person. So for us and for the family, it's closure if it is the victim."
"At this moment we want to take a moment to express our sympathies to the entire Amabile family as they navigate this tragic outcome to a nightmare that has lasted 18 years," the divers wrote in the YouTube video's description last week.
Jess Mastriani was a normal person who only wanted to take over her parents' restaurant in Indiana. But that changed when she was hit by lightning. After that she began seeing visions of missing people. Jess decides to use her newfound ability to be a consultant to the FBI, helping locate missing individuals. Eventually, she is hired by the bureau full-time and trained to become an agent, but her by-the-book nature sometimes clashes with the personality of her partner. Jess and her colleagues work out of the FBI's Washington, D.C., office.
Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) encountered a problem while attempting to access a property or method. The problem may be one of the following:A reference is missing.For help restoring missing references, see the Microsoft Knowledge Base article 283806.An Expression is misspelled.Check all expressions used in event properties for correct spelling.
You might have noticed that your previous Access mdb referenced Microsoft ActiveX Data Objects 2.1 Library, and did not reference any Microsoft DAO Object Library. If, in your Access 2003 file, you are referencing DAO library before ADO library, and if the original code is poorly written, where in particuler recordsets are declared this way:
How come I do not see a ForestDNSZones and DomainDNSZones partition under my
child AD 2003 domain inside the DNS management console? This child domain
is one of two domains in an AD 2003 forest (one parent, one child) forest.
I do indeed see both of these partitions in the forest root domain but not
under the child domain. See URL below, you will have to set Internet
Explorer to FULL screen mode to view the bitmap properly. Notice in the
corp.alpha.local (highlighted domain in picture), both ForestDNSZones and
DomainDNSZonesare missing. But if you look under alpha.local (forest root)
both of these partitions are present.
_domaindnszones_in_corp.gif--
Spin
Try rt-clicking the zone, new domain, type in DomainDnsZones. Then run
netdiag /v /fix. Refresh the console. I've done it this was a few times.
Keep in mind, from a child, (can't remember this for sure), you may not be
able to see the ForestDnsZones since I believe you need to be an EA.--
AceThis posting is provided "AS-IS" with no warranties or guarantees and
confers no rights.Having difficulty reading or finding responses to your post?
Instead of the website you're using, I suggest to use OEx (Outlook Express
or any other newsreader), and configure a news account, pointing to
news.microsoft.com. This is a direct link to the Microsoft Public
Newsgroups. It is FREE and requires NO ISP's Usenet account. OEx allows you
to easily find, track threads, cross-post, sort by date, poster's name,
watched threads or subject.It's easy:
How to Configure OEx for Internet News
=171164Ace Fekay, MCSE 2003 & 2000, MCSA 2003 & 2000, MCSE+I, MCT, MVP
Microsoft MVP - Directory Services
Microsoft Certified TrainerInfinite Diversities in Infinite Combinations
Assimilation Imminent. Resistance is Futile
"Very funny Scotty. Now, beam down my clothes."The only thing in life is change. Anything more is a blackhole consuming
unnecessary energy. - [Me]
No, that's not what I said. I said that you may be able to see the
DomainDnsZones, but _*MAY*_ not be able tosee the ForestDnsZones.Have you tried my procedure yet? There's nothing to lose... and nothing
gained by not trying it.Ace
The scope of your child domain is probably still "All domain controllers in
this domain" as opposed to "All DNS servers in this domain".As for why the ForestDNSZones isn't showing, three things spring to mind (in
no particular order):1. Non-Windows 2003 DNSMGMT.MSC console or DNS server.
2. Permissions problem.
3. Name resolution problem.
Logon to the child domain with an admin account in the root domain and see
if you can see the ForestDNSZones then. If you can, you need to check the
permissions on that zone. If you cannot, you need to check that that
snap-in is OK and that the DNS server in question is actually reading zone
info. from AD. In the child, can you resolve
ForestDNSZones.domain-name.com? That sub-domain should have been
registered. You should be able to resolve it. If you can't, that is
probably your issue.
1) Is that why I do not have a DomainDNSZones partition?
2) How should I attempt to resolve "ForestDNSZones.domain-name.com"? Should
I be using this syntax:nslookup ForestDNSZones.alpha.local--
Spin