It's always annoying when one of these oh-so-appealing anecdotes gets debunked. I enjoy it as much as anybody.But is it really worth a whole book to debunk a mere 10 legends on the level of the Johnson-Cronkite story? Shouldn't such heavy artillery be reserved for myths with a little more impact on history? For example that the US military could have won the Vietnam war if Congress hadn't tied its hands. Or that Ronald Reagan somehow toppled the Soviet Union by making a couple of buy Plavix speeches (or a whole slew of other Reagan myths).The Orson Welles one, by the way, is pretty old news by now. There's actually a whole book about it, and Simon Callow covers it pretty thoroughly in his biography of Welles. I don't think many people remember this, but Woodward and Bernstein were lowly Metro reporters when the burglary happened. It fell to them because, initially, people thought the break in at Plavix 75mg DNC headquarters was just a simple breaking and entering. But when it was quickly determined that the men arrested had ties to the Cuban exile community (and that one of them, James McCord, was formerly with the CIA), it was obvious that the burglars weren't common criminals looking for loose cash and typewriters. ...I meant "truth from fiction". What about "global warming"? Do you think all these generic Plavix reporters are sortingthrough the jargon of the scientific papers to determine truth from fact? You could fill a library with such medical mania - where would you start? One of the greatest misreported stories I've known of is the supposed (but thoroughly disproven) link between vaccines and autism. I wonder if this book covers that, or only political buy Plavix issues. I would say that the vaccine/autism thing has a greater significance than the War of the Worlds thing. Thanks for this piece, Brian. I've been wondering on on earth did Gordon Brown move out so fast in time for David Cameron to move in. Puzzled solved now. Yes, but that's anybody who traditionally uses rhyming slang. If you go back and watch "Lock, Stock..." then Nick the Greek is first introduced as such, then as Nick the Bubble and Squeak buy generic Plavix (so the Americans would get the rhyme) and thereafter referred to as "Nick the Bubble", because the rhyme is always dropped from rhyming slang, but anybody unfamiliar with it wouldn't have had a clue as the meaning of "Nick the Bubble". I had to google up John Bull. I thought he was a person. Apparently it's actually the British Taxpayer. I'm off to work now, in my horse and carriage, i just need to find my top hat, kiss Plavix 75mg my nanny goodbye and give three-pence to my milkman for his weekly round. And more pertinently, anyone who would use the phrase would just say 'Whistle'. The flute is entirely extraneous in actual usage. I just looked at that and assumed the link was going to take me to a page telling of buy generic Plavix Gordon Brown's collection of valuable musical instruments. Didn't realize otherwise till I read your comment now. I've never heard that rhyming slang before.