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  Monday, December 15, 2003


   ---[AP Politics]
10:50:09 PM  Google It!    trackback []

Anti-war Democrat Howard Dean said Monday the capture of Saddam Hussein doesn't alter his opposition to President Bush's policies on Iraq as he outlined plans to repair alliances, bolster U.S. forces and fight ``catastrophic terrorism'' carried out by weapons of mass destruction. By The Associated Press. [New York Times: NYT HomePage]
10:41:00 PM  Google It!    trackback []

 - - -[Washington Post: Nation and Politics]
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    [AP Politics]
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---   [AP Politics]
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 - --[Washington Post: Nation and Politics]
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[AP Politics]
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Some said that for now it appeared to supply a daunting lead to President Bush's re-election campaign, although all added caveats. By Brian Knowlton, International Herald Tribune. [New York Times: NYT HomePage]
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- [AP Politics]
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Some of AARP's more than 35 million members burned their membership cards or sent angry e-mails after the advocacy group endorsed the Republican-backed Medicare bill. By Gay Jervey. [New York Times: Business]
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At some major companies, post-employment health plans are in even more dire shape than pensions. By Gretchen Morgenson. [New York Times: Business]
8:37:24 PM  Google It!    trackback []

[Washington Post: Editorial]

YOU MIGHT THINK that almost four decades after the Supreme Court handed down the famed decision in Miranda v. Arizona, it would no longer have to spend time interpreting it. But long after the case was accepted by the overwhelming majority of law enforcement bodies, cases keep parading before the court. Most of them call for relatively unimportant clarifications. But on Tuesday the court heard arguments in a case in which police in Missouri intentionally failed to warn a suspect of her rights before eliciting a confession from her. After she spilled the beans, they induced her to sign a Miranda waiver and repeat the story. If this second confession is admissible, as the state contends, Miranda has a significant loophole. ...


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