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Madonna, Ritchie granted preliminary divorce
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
Spears makes unexpected appearance in court
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
Shuttle gives space station a mile-high boost
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
Rwanda protocol chief says shell prove innocence
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
Lame-duck US, Israeli leaders to meet a final time
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
Suspected US missile strike kills 5 in Pakistan
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
Nepals Buddha boy returns to jungle to meditate
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
Kanye Wests new album to debut on MySpace Music
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
Hollywood actors guild to seek strike
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
On Capitol Hill, campaign rivals take orientation
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
Dow up 494 as Obama prepares to name treasury boss
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
Pressure on Citigroup builds, shares fall below $4
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
Minn. Senate campaigns reconsidering challenges
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
Hoax witness Neighbor hoped to mess with Megan
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
KGs 1st game in Target Center is a rout
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
Fans flock to Twilight premiere in Los Angeles
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
Calif. trains collide no serious injuries
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
Punk musician Barker sues over SC plane crash
Southern Ledger - November 22, 2008
 
Home >US News Archive  > Year 2005  > June  > 27 June 2005

US News Archive for June 2005:
2005
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From the Rubble: A City of Old? Or All Shiny and New?
Kabul, Afghanistan, was once a fabled city of gardens and fruit orchards, but little of its glorious past is evident today...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
US lawmakers oppose China oil bid
US lawmakers call for close examination of the $18.5bn (£10bn) unsolicited bid for American oil firm Unocal by Chinese rival CNOOC...
BBC News - June 27, 2005
NBA: New rule blocks Oden
x...
BBC News - June 27, 2005
Graham addresses 'final' rally
US Christian evangelist Billy Graham leads thousands in the last day of what may be his final mass prayer rally...
BBC News - June 27, 2005
In Battle to Pick Next Justice, Right Says, Avoid a Kennedy
Justice Anthony M. Kennedy is looming in many conservatives' minds as just the kind of mistake they hope President Bush avoids...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
U.S. Has Plans to Again Make Own Plutonium
The Bush administration's plan to produce plutonium 238 is stirring debate over the risks and benefits of the deadly material...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Graham Ends Crusade in City Urging Repentance and Hope
The Rev. Billy Graham concluded what might be his final American crusade, warning that the end of the world may be imminent...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Yankees Push Broom Away by Bouncing Back
Three outs from being swept by the Mets, the Yankees scored twice off Braden Looper in the bottom of the ninth inning...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
China's Economic Brawn Unsettles Japanese
Japanese investors are growing wary of China’s growing economic might. And as China grows, Japan, the world's second-largest economy, will need powerful friends...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Of Co-ops, Condos and Controversy: Real Estate Agents Embrace a Critic
Steven Gaines's recent book, "The Sky's the Limit: Passion and Property in Manhattan," is a less-than-flattering portrait of the New York real estate industry. But a funny thing happened when Mr. Gaines depicted the industry as a sausage factory: he was invited over for sausage...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Survey on News Media Finds Wide Displeasure
A Pew study found that the media is more trusted than the Supreme Court and Congress. The exception: national newspapers...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
On the Internet, Nobody Knows You're a Crime Dog
McGruff the Crime Dog is now walking a new beat. The government has reassigned him to fight identity theft...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Reuters, Seeking Brand Awareness, to Offer G-8 News Online and Direct
For the G8 summit, the Reuters news service has decided to cut out the middleman and offer its news feeds directly...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
The Tell-All Steven Florio Won't Sell
Steven T. Florio, the former chief executive of Condé Nast, says some of the hyperbole in the proposal for his book was unfortunate...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
You've Read the Gossip; Still Want to See the Movie?
As the box office continued its slump into an 18th weekend, studio executives were left to ponder whether their films were taking a back seat to the public chatter about their stars...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
A Liquor Maker Keeps a Close Watch on Its Ads
The hottest trend in the spirits business these days is not raspberry vodka or pomegranate martinis, but something far less intoxicating: self-regulation...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Pioneers Are Taking Black Chick Lit Into Middle Age
The characers from new novels by Terry McMillan, Connie Briscoe and Benilde Little reflect more mature lives affected by issues like remarriage, career struggles and troubled family members...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
SBC's TV Project Isn't Happening at 'Lightspeed'
SBC, the telecommunications giant, calls its planned television service, "Project Lightspeed." Unfortunately, its introduction is not living up to the name...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Drop That Cellphone, You Celebrity. It's a Film Premiere.
The publicity blunders leading up to the release of Paramount Studios' "War of the Worlds" turned into a cellphone pratfall on Thursday...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Morningstar Chief to Buy 2 Magazines
Gruner & Jahr USA said over the weekend that it had agreed to sell two of its business magazines, Inc. and Fast Company, to Joe Mansueto, the founder and chief executive of Morningstar, a mutual fund information service...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Knocking on the Door, but Not Staying Long
Since April of 2004, the radio format known as "Jack" has been officially adopted by 16 stations in the United States, and many others display traits that are Jack-like...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
MTV Finds a New Ally in Games
In an intra-Sumner Redstone deal, Midway will feature MTV content on its videogames...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Ex-F.B.I. Chief Calls Deep Throat's Unmasking a Shock
L. Patrick Gray III, the acting director of the F.B.I. at the time of the Watergate break-in, said that he felt betrayal by the disclosure that his former deputy was Deep Throat...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Doubleday Borrows a Page From Hollywood
Doubleday is using tactics more common to a Hollywood blockbuster movie to market "The Traveler," a story set in a futuristic society...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Why Variable Pricing Fails at the Vending Machine
Consumers seem willing to tolerate variable pricing - paying different prices at different time - when it comes to big items like cars and airline tickets. So why won't they pay more for a cold soda on a hot day?...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
On Screens, but Not Store Shelves: Casual Games
In recent years "casual games," sold only online and downloaded into personal computers, have quietly found major audiences...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Days of Tax-Free Online Sales May Be Numbered
A recent court decision, along with other efforts by state tax collectors to focus on Internet sales, could signal that the era of tax-free online sales is nearing an end...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Advertisers Pour More Money Into the Big Screen
Hate being stuck in a movie theater with no choice but to watch advertisements? Get used to it. Advertisers like these spots, and have been buying more of them...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Behind China's Bid for Unocal: A Costly Quest for Energy Control
China is seeking to loosen the U.S. grip on world energy resources and secure the fuel it needs to keep its economy in overdrive...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
Low Rates Could Be Around for Long Term
Federal Reserve officials, who meet this week, are beginning to suspect that the perplexing decline in long-term interest rates is more than a temporary aberration...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
At McGraw-Hill, an Heir Takes Over and the Company Flourishes
When an heir took control at the venerable McGraw-Hill many were skeptical. But in the 12 years since he took over as chief executive, the company's stock has risen 437 percent...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
The Lawsuit of the Rings
Peter Jackson, the powerful and popular director, is suing New Line Cinema, the subsidiary of Time Warner that financed and distributed his "Lord of the Rings" film trilogy...
New York Times - June 27, 2005
 
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WILL GAYS SERVING OPENLY IN THE U.S. MILITARY STRENGTHEN OUR MILITARY?
NO. MORE DISTRACTIONS WILL NOT MAKE US STRONGER.
YES. MORE PEOPLE THAN EVER WILL BE ABLE TO SERVE.
IT WON'T MAKE ANY DIFFERENCE AT ALL.
GAYS ARE ALREADY SERVING SO IT WON'T HELP OR HURT MUCH.
NOT SURE.
 
 

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WILL AMERICA COME TOGETHER AFTER THE ELECTION?
October 30, 2008 - November 4, 2008

WHY VOTERS ARE FURIOUS ABOUT THE BAILOUT PACKAGE.
October 5, 2008 - October 11, 2008

BOGUS POLL INTENDED TO BOOST OBAMA.
September 27, 2008 - October 4, 2008

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