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| Fri, 23 Dec 2005 00:00:00 EDT New York's Subways and Buses Operating on Normal Schedules |
| The morning rush returned to normal today as striking transit workers returned to work for the first morning commute in four days. |
| Fri, 23 Dec 2005 00:00:00 EDT Most Riders Are Relieved, Some Thrilled, by Return to Routine |
| Whatever their experience during the past three days, for most riders, the sound of the subway this morning spelled relief. |
| Fri, 23 Dec 2005 00:00:00 EDT China Moves to Put Jailed Times Researcher on Trial |
| Zhao Yan, a researcher for The New York Times, was indicted today for revealing state secrets to the newspaper, his lawyer said. |
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| Thu, 22 Dec 2005 08:00:00 EST Bush upbeat as year ends |
| President Bush and his White House strategists believe the administration is ending the year on an upbeat note and they see signs that 2006 will bring a recovery of the president's political fortunes. Vice President Cheney's breaking a tie in the Senate this morning to win passage for legislation cutting the federal deficit by $39.7 billion is the latest positive sign. White House insiders say this shows that the White House and the Republican majority in Congress can still work their will despite increasingly determined Democratic opposition and doubts about the president's agenda from a handful of GOP moderates. |
| Wed, 21 Dec 2005 16:00:00 EST Senators hope to strip oil taxes from Katrina bill |
| Senators worried that new Senate-backed taxes on oil and gas firms will boost prices at the pump and curb exploration believe their effort to strip the provisions from Katrina Emergency Tax Relief Act of 2005 is moving forward.
"There's talk of getting them stripped out in House-Senate conference," says a lobbyist who is working the issue. But, he hedged, "no one really knows for sure." |
| Mon, 19 Dec 2005 16:00:00 EST The Christmas skirmish is part of a larger war |
| This Week with George Stephanopoulos is my favorite inside-the-beltway talk show. George Will, Cokie Roberts, and Fareed Zakaria are routinely excellent. But yesterday's snickering assessment of the "War on Christmas" was surely a low. Lots of elite inside chuckling about those crazed and defensive Christians and their battle commander Bill O'Reilly. Rep. John Dingell was shown mocking the defense of Christmas and saying "Silent Night," "First Noel," and "Away in the Manger" are in no danger. Sam Donaldson announced that there is no war on Christmas. Chuckle, chuckle. |
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