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41. Www.sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca/~ab133/Archives/Digests/v04n400-499/v04-n426.txt
And they require more public debate and discussion than they directtv Hi, Foryour info, Direct tv is available and has so far been OKed thru the courts.
http://www.sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca/~ab133/Archives/Digests/v04n400-499/v04-n426.txt
Subject: Poll at CNews Go vote at: http://www.canoe.ca/CNEWSPolitics/home.html Thursday, January 3, 2002 CNEWS Poll How should Canadians feel if we're left out of the Afghan stabilization force? Total Votes for this Question: 596 So far, 16% have voted for Thankful our soldiers are not at risk So far, 53% have voted for Embarrassed at the sad state of our armed forces So far, 3% have voted for Angry at Britain for leaving us out So far, 16% have voted for Committed to revitalizing our military So far, 13% have voted for Satisfied that there must be a good reason Although I agree with the option of being 'embarrassed', I placed my vote at 'committed to revitalizing our military'. Funny the way many Canadians 'recognize a problem', but seem to 'choose' to do nothing about it. Doing something about it (solution) should be a priority. But that's JMO. Linda N.Vcr. Date: Thu, 3 Jan 2002 18:50:38 -0600 From: "The Jordans" Subject: Fw: directtv > Hi, > For your info, Direct tv is available in Canada from many suppliers, and at > widely variable costs. It is openly advertized and has so far been OKed thru > the courts. In this area the costs run $500 and up for a basic system and > $250 for an "all inclusive" card. A better alternative is to pay $40 per > month for the card with free re-programing as required. For this you have > complete access to ALL programming including ppv. > OLN is on ch. 608. > Rob > Date: Thu, 3 Jan 2002 21:06:45 -0600 From: Michael Ackermann

42. Emory
International Association, chess, photography, debate, film and jazz band, orchestra,radio and tv stations, Student gym with four basketball courts, an Olympic
http://www.blackexcel.org/emory.htm
Emory University
Boisfeuillet Jones Center
Atlanta, GA 30322
Web site: www.emory.edu
College Rank:
Emory University is one of the highest ranked colleges in the nation. In a recent U.S. News and World Report , it placed 16th among the top 25 universities. Its endowment is now more than
$4 billion (the sixth largest in the nation). Some experts, however, say Emory is often a "second choice" to students looking to the Ivy League and other prestigious schools. Right now it looks like these students are in a win-win situation. Interestingly, in the Black Enterprise selections of its "50 top Colleges for African-Americans (1999)"the first nine schools were historically Black collegesEmory placed in the fourth position behind Stanford, Georgetown and Columbia. Note also that in a recent edition of the Journal of Blacks in Higher Education it was pointed out that Emory had the highest percentage of Black students enrolled, 10.3%, more than any of the top 25 nationally ranked colleges or universities.
The Campus: When you arrive at Emory you will probably stand on North Decatur Road and enter through the Hopkins-Haywood Gate, the main entrance. You'll get a suburban, picture-postcard view of flowers in bloom, green lawns, shrubbery. Walking on those pathways and hills, you'll discover a 631-acre campus (it's about six miles from downtown Atlanta) that will be memorable. Another plus is Lullwater Park, which adjoins the campus. You can stroll on walking trails, bird watch and even hold hands (perhaps)at a small lake. In Atlanta, you'll find a myriad of attractions: malls, museums, restaurants, cinemas, whatever your heart desires.

43. NEWSRADIO 740 KTRH - Houston
send the lawsuit back to the lower courts for further this country and this worlda huge debate over the reduce the jury process to reality tv, like `Survivor
http://www.ktrh.com/local.html
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Daylight-Saving Time Returns This Weekend (4/4/03) Set up the badminton net and break out the barbecue — daylight-saving time kicks in this weekend.
That means push the clocks ahead — spring forward — to gain an hour of light in the evening for warm summer recreation. The official change comes at 2 a.m. Sunday.
It's also a good time to replace batteries in smoke alarms, safety advocates urge.
Daylight-saving time lasts until Oct. 26
Some parts of the country don't observe daylight-saving time. Those include Arizona, Hawaii, the part of Indiana located in the Eastern time zone, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and American Samoa.
Suspected Case of SARS in Fort Bend County Brings State Total To Four (4/4/03) A fourth suspected case of severe acute respiratory syndrome , or SARS, has been reported in Texas, the Texas Department of Health says.
Doug McBride, department spokesman, said the latest case of the mysterious flu-like illness is from Fort Bend County.
Of the other suspected cases, two are in Harris County and one is in Collin County. In one of the Harris County cases, the patient lives in Lubbock but has not been back there since developing symptoms, McBride said.

44. Central Europe Review - Czech Media: Crisis By Design
now one of the hot topics of Czech public debate. with another private station, suchas Nova tv, pumping out attempts to prosecute in the courts, manoeuvres to
http://www.ce-review.org/00/39/altman39.html
Vol 2, No 39
13 November 2000 CER INFO
front page

overview

our awards

CER cited
...
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year 2000

year 1999

by subject

by author
... search MORE ebookstore pbookshop music shop video store ... links Crisis by Design Jana Altman The story goes that, in the Czech Republic today, the media are undergoing a crisis, and freedom of speech is at risk. Criticised and attacked by politicians for being biased and unprofessional, the media are being hit with new state regulations. A new law on print media was adopted earlier this year, and now the broadcasting laws are about to be amended. On the surface, it may look like a return to the Communist Stone Age, but scratch a bit deeper and you'll find that the Czech media are at least partially to blame for this "crisis." The politics of journalism While most police work in the Czech Republic is regarded as incompetent at best, journalists charged with various crimes always seem to be assigned hard-working policemen. In any case, they certainly receive more diligent investigation than the "stars" of any political scandals. Last year, Tom¡Å¡ Smrček, a reporter for commercial television station Nova, disclosed information about a person who was, at that time, a candidate for the director of the Czech state security service (BIS). The candidate, Jiř­ Růžek, had allegedly tried to pull strings to get his friend out of a drink drive charge. Smrček showed a string-pulling letter written by Růžek on television to support his statement.

45. 3.03: The Supreme Court
in the New York media, raising debate over the talks about the educational valueof Court tv, there is and titillating drama that goes on in American courts.
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/3.03/brill_pr.html

Issue 3.03
- Mar 1995
The Supreme Court
Steven Brill's Court TV isn't just reporting courtroom drama, it's becoming the law's interface to the public. And it's great TV.
By Jeff Goodell
TV sucks, but you can't blame the box. As a piece of hardware, it's sophisticated, efficient, easy to use. It rarely crashes. It's cheap. When you switch it on, it doesn't make Bill Gates any richer (not yet, anyway). It's capable of receiving a beautiful clear picture from anywhere in the world. Install a camera in Red Square, point a dish at the stars, and in an instant, 100 million people can have Russian tanks rolling into their living rooms. TV takes you places with the most powerful vehicle technology has yet built: pure image, pure picture. Of course, it rarely works that way. Since television started proliferating across the earth in the '50s, programmers have thrown more and more stuff between you and the picture. We now have razzle-dazzle graphics and witty commentary and million-dollar anchors and intrepid correspondents and ads for Saabs and hemorrhoid ointments and breakfast cereals and an endless parade of bozos blathering on and on. There have been moments of great clarity and power: The McCarthy hearings. The moon landing. The Persian Gulf war. O.J. in the white Bronco. But in general, TV has moved away from the simple notion of pointing a camera at the world and showing it to you. Along the way, we have forgotten what a great journalistic tool TV is, with its tremendous power and immediacy.

46. PalmInfocenter.com: Microsoft To Put Its Muscle Behind Bluetooth
cable and satellite tv, video game consoles, computer peripherals, phones The courtsdon't trust Microsoft but the locals losers have a long debate about whether
http://www.palminfocenter.com/view_story.asp?ID=3328

47. Articles
rackets were sacrificed regularly on tennis courts to calm her fetishes When pushedthe tv company went Court Propaganda Sparks EU Tennis debate (Extract from
http://cteam.freeservers.com/articles.htm
Click logo to visit C-Team Home Articles Something You Didn't Know About Tennis? Deal Tennis Bubble Visible From Space Aussie open 2003 Aggression and the club player ... A WOMAN refused library membership Something You Didn't Know About Tennis? Fact of the day: Hold your racket in front of your face and then stand in front of a mirror, What do you see? If your head is:
(a) Smaller than racket-head : Your forehand is better than your backhand but you dispute line calls to the point of violence.
(b) Larger than racket-head : You like mixed doubles and yachting but you know you are crap.
If you are Japonese like this lovely fat bird (above) then the opposite applies, for example, Michael Chang has a weird head and so prefers doubles. East Kent Club Tennis a Hotbed of ET Shenanigans Anna Kournikova Writes: East Kent is well known as a center for both club tennis excellence (hahahahaha) and weird supernatural shit. But it is only the more lucid among us that realize the two are connected. In fact the Epicenter is clearly Deal - a humble seaside town which boasts a extraterrestrial indoor tennis court. Lets look at some facts:
  • In 1987 the bubble made a break for freedom but only made it as far as the channel where it picked up some "freaky radioactive seaweed"

48. Keep And Bear Arms - Gun Owners Home Page - 2nd Amendment Supporters
But the courts decided a long time ago that no one is She approached Mr. Man In Blackafter the debate. stance was like none she’d ever seen on tv, and she
http://www.keepandbeararms.com/information/XcIBViewItem.asp?ID=1632

49. BBC News | ASIA-PACIFIC | Sex Scandal Grips Taiwan
into people's private lives, with impassioned debate on both former friend, as theprime suspect behind the sex bar China vows to overhaul courts Koreas trade
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/asia-pacific/newsid_1735000/1735739.stm
CATEGORIES TV RADIO COMMUNICATE ... INDEX SEARCH You are in: World: Asia-Pacific Front Page World ... AudioVideo
SERVICES Daily E-mail News Ticker Mobiles/PDAs Feedback ... Low Graphics Monday, 31 December, 2001, 12:46 GMT Sex scandal grips Taiwan
Chu Mei-feng has spoken to reporters [Photo by Henry Tan]
By Michael Bristow in Taipei The Taiwanese have been gripped in recent weeks by allegations of a sex scandal involving a public figure. The affair surrounds Chu Mei-feng, a former politician and civil servant who has apparently been filmed by a secret camera having sex with her married lover. Just before Christmas, a story about the incident was published by the tabloid-style magazine Scoop Weekly.
People are desperate to get hold of the video
It also gave away a free 40-minute video of the bedroom antics. The government quickly pulled the video from newsagent shelves - although the magazine itself was left alone - saying the publishers had broken laws that ban the sale of indecent material. But that has only served to give the scandal more publicity. Each day brings fresh allegations and comments from the people involved, and the video itself has become the holiday season's most wanted item, with people desperate to get their hands on it.

50. Does Public Have A Right To Watch?
the air in the name of a moral debate on the courts have denied visual coverageof executions for a number of said they would watch if it were shown on tv.
http://csmweb2.emcweb.com/durable/2001/06/12/p1s4.htm
Monitor Site Map @csmonitor.com About Us/Help Advertising Christian Science Article Archive AP's The WIRE Crossword puzzle Forums (join in!) Home International News Links Library News In Brief Subscriptions US News Weekly News Quiz
TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 2001
e-mail
this story to a friend write a letter to the editor (oped@csps.com)
USA
Does public have a right to watch?
  • McVeigh debate may have brought US closer to televised executions.
  • By Kim Campbell (campbellk@csps.com)
    Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
    When Ruth Snyder was executed at Sing Sing prison in 1928, an industrious reporter sneaked in a camera by strapping it to his leg and caught the moment on film. Ms. Snyder was the tabloid sensation of her decade - she and her lover murdered her husband - and the New York Daily News could hardly keep up with the demand when the photo of her in the electric chair appeared on the front page the next day. That feat is not likely to be repeated in modern times, when reporters are searched before entering the witness box - as they were in Terre Haute, Ind., yesterday for Timothy McVeigh's execution. Of more concern there was the encrypted closed-circuit TV feed watched by survivors and victims' families in Oklahoma City, which was considered a target for hackers. But even if images of Mr. McVeigh's final moments are never seen, his high-profile case has brought new vigor to the debate over televised executions. The convicted bomber's request for the event to be broadcast was dismissed long ago, but it helped kindle a discussion that invokes everything from the First Amendment to the impact of reality TV.

    51. Cameras In Cruisers Keep Crooks In Check
    take excess money from the Clerk of courts Auto Title In Cleveland, a camera clearedan officer accused of incidents also have become fodder for tv shows like
    http://enquirer.com/editions/1998/08/22/loc_videocam22.html

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    /* You may give each page an identifying name, server, and channel on the next lines. */ var pageName="" var server="" var channel="" var pageType="" var pageValue="" var prop1="" var prop2="" var prop3="" var prop4="" var prop5="" var prop6="news" var prop7="" var prop8="" var prop9="" var prop10="" /********* INSERT THE DOMAIN AND PATH TO YOUR CODE BELOW ************/ /********** DO NOT ALTER ANYTHING ELSE BELOW THIS LINE! *************/ var s_code=' ' E N Q U I R E R L O C A L N E W S C O V E R A G E
    Cameras in cruisers keep crooks in check
    Saturday, August 22, 1998
    BY ALLEN HOWARD and TANYA ALBERT
    The Cincinnati Enquirer
    Norwood Officer Bobby Ward shows the video monitoring system in his cruiser. looking through the window is Jim Cissell, Hamilton County Clerk of Courts. (Tony Jones photo) ZOOM A high-speed chase started at Kenwood Road and ended at the Norwood Lateral. Facing charges of fleeing, child endangering and driving without a license, the 21-year-old defendant argued before Municipal Court Judge Jack Rosen Thursday that he was not guilty. "When we showed the judge a video of the chase, the defendant changed his plea to guilty," said Lt. Ed Christman of the Madeira Police Division.

    52. Reason Magazine -- April 1998
    not retroactive, according to Smolla, the courts would let cable, but not use of theTV for videocassettes or True debate and discussion is the last thing most
    http://reason.com/9804/col.powell.html
    R EASON * April 1998 The Broadcast Giveaway
    When "the public interest" means free ads for politicians By Adam Clayton Powell III "We have to address the real reason for the explosion in campaign costs: the high cost of media advertising. I willfor the folks watching at home, those were the groans of pain in the audienceI will formally request that the Federal Communications Commission act to provide free or reduced-cost television time for candidates who observe spending limits voluntarily." So said President Clinton in his State of the Union address. And so, over the groans of his listeners in Congress, he told the American people watching on television that he planned to require broadcasters to make campaign donations of commercial time to political candidatesor, more precisely, to candidates approved by the major political parties. What the president did not tell Americans watching on television was that he had already appointed a commission last year to do just that. The Advisory Committee on Public Interest Obligations of Digital Television Broadcasters, more widely known as the Gore Commission, is charged with creating a series of new "public interest obligations" for broadcasters. Since October, it has been deciding how high a price television stations must pay, in free political advertising time and other "public service" costs, to keep their licenses. Of course, that's not exactly the way the White House wanted the commission to be viewed by the media in general and broadcasters in particular. But consider the president's own words last June, when he announced the appointment of the panel's co-chairmen, Les Moonves, president of CBS Television, and Norman Ornstein, resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute: "For years," Clinton said, "I have supported giving candidates free time....Now we're working to make it happen. Today I'm appointing two distinguished Americans to lead a commission that will help the FCC decide precisely how free broadcast time can be given to candidates, as part of the broadcasters' public interest obligations." The president described the donation of air time to political candidates as "the least we can ask of broadcasters."

    53. National NOW Conference 1999
    not much of the contention and heated debate that has issues; defending reproductiverights in the courts, clinics, and the most money or ads on tv; this is
    http://www.nownyc.org/news/novdec99news/1999natconf.htm
    Independence Day, NOW Style: National NOW Conference, 1999
    Independence Day 1999 found hundreds of activists at NOW’s annual national conference, this year in Los Angeles. The fireworks came from the energetic mix of ardent debate and sisterly consensus, inspiring speeches and ordinary business that characterize NOW gatherings. I always appreciate NOW’s yearly convention to “recharge my battery” and remind me why I’m in this movement. After all, how often do I get to spend the weekend conspiring with so many kindred spirits—not that we all agree on everything, to be sure, but we are working toward common goals.
    This year, NOW-NYC President Galen Sherwin and I attended the conference as NOW-NYC delegates. Once again, the conference was an excellent opportunity to meet other activists, strategize, debate, draft and vote on NOW policy, gain skills and information at workshops, be motivated by speakers, stock up on feminist paraphernalia at vendor tables—and to have fun. There was not a lot of controversy at this conference; perhaps because this was not an election meeting there was not much of the contention and heated debate that has marked some past conferences.
    You may not find listening to speeches interesting, but for me one of the more stimulating parts of this conference was hearing from the excellent keynote speakers and panelists. Two plenary sessions, in particular, featured exceptionally inspiring women: one, a panel of women legislators and the other a group of women working in the entertainment industry.

    54. 2306-News Summary
    His death, which a camera crew recorded, was a tragic with a proposal that settledthe debate on school Supreme Court cases have their roots in lower courts.
    http://www.outreach.psu.edu/EdComm/WitnWeb/2306/2306_script.html

    55. Blogdriverswaltz.com :: Throw Another Blog On The Wire ::
    newspaper, magazine, radio or tv station will House Judiciary Committee's Subcommitteeon courts, the Internet and The Scholarly Publishing debate are both
    http://blogdriverswaltz.com/
    Home About Me Resume Portfolio ... Media I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." (Mark Twain)
    ::: Search blogdriverswaltz.com:
    06 April 2003 G is for Geoff smothered under a rug is for Amy who fell down the stairs, B is for Basil assaulted by bears... Fans of the late Edward Gorey and the Gashlycrumb Tinies will enjoy this online version of his rather macabre tale of "mayhem meets the alphabet." A truly prodigious and original artist, Edward St. John Gorey (1925-2000), gave to the world over one hundred works, including The Gashlycrumb Tinies, The Doubtful Guest and The Wuggly Ump; prize-winning set and costume designs for innumerable theater productions from Cape Cod to Broadway; a remarkable number of illustrations in publications such as The New Yorker and The New York Times, and in books by a wide array of authors from Charles Dickens to Edward Lear, Samuel Beckett, John Updike, Virginia Woolf, H.G. Wells, Florence Heide and many others. His well known animated credits for the PBS Mystery series have introduced him to millions of television viewers. Gorey's masterful pen and ink illustrations and his ironic, offbeat humor have brought him critical acclaim and an avid following throughout the world. [ Edward Gorey House
    Web of knowledge
    TrackBack (0) Comment (0)
    04 April 2003 Operation Oily was reading through Michael Moore's website

    56. Silha Bulletin - Summer 2001
    Access to McVeigh Execution Prompts Ethical, Legal debate. Eight tv networks broadcastlive from the location Yeltsin’s resignation, Russian courts froze Ntv
    http://www.silha.umn.edu/summer2001.htm
    Silha Bulletin Summer 2001 Volume 6, Number 4 U.S. Supreme Court Rules In Historic Bartnicki Case By Elaine Hargrove-Simon In the most anticipated media law decision in nearly ten years, the Supreme Court ruled on May 21, 2001 that a news organization cannot be punished for disseminating the truthful contents of an illegally recorded telephone conversation as long as the information is in the public interest and the news organization did not participate in the interception. The case, Bartnicki v. Vopper , began in May 1993 during negotiations between a Pennsylvania school board and a teachers’ union. Gloria Bartnicki, a negotiator in the contract dispute, and Anthony Kane, president of the teachers’ union, were speaking to one another by cellular phone about the dispute when their call was intercepted and recorded by an unknown person. In the recording, Bartnicki can be heard saying, “If they’re not going to move for three percent [referring to a pay raise], we’re gonna have to go to their, their homes…to blow off their front porches, we’ll have to do some work on some of those guys.” Jack Yocum, president of a group formed to oppose the teachers’ union during the negotiation, found the tape of Bartnicki and Kane’s conversation in his mailbox. He gave it to Frederick Vopper, the host of a local radio talk show. Vopper played the tape on his show after the union and the school board had come to agreement. Afterwards, Bartnicki and Kane sued in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, citing Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2511, 2520, and the Pennsylvania Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance Control Act, 18 Pa. Con. Stat. Ann. § 5701 et seq. These acts impose criminal and civil penalties on anyone who intentionally intercepts a private conversation, or who discloses the contents of a conversation knowing that it was illegally intercepted.

    57. Big Brother Logs On
    contradictory values often trigger vigorous debate over whether it government reportscite closedcircuit tv as a Well, the courts are slowly getting involved.
    http://icg.harvard.edu/~ss98em/Readings/Amato-Big_Brother_Logs_On.htm
    Big Brother Logs On Technology Review , September 2001 By Ivan Amato Feeling exposed? Watchful technologies could soon put everyone under surveillance. But those same parents might be shocked to learn how short the journey is from the pleasant surveillance fantasy of Santa to the freedom-squashing invasion of Big Brother. In the world detailed by George Orwell in the novel , surveillance cameras follow every move a person makes, and the slightest misstep, or apparent misstep, summons the authorities. Now, similarly, police departments, government agencies, banks, merchants, amusement parks, sports arenas, nanny-watching homeowners, swimming-pool operators, and employers are deploying cameras, pattern recognition algorithms, databases of information, and biometric tools that when taken as a whole can be combined into automated surveillance networks able to track just about anyone, just about anywhere. While none of us is under 24-hour surveillance yet, the writing is on the wall. As Scott McNealy, CEO of Sun Microsystems, starkly told reporters in 1999, "You already have zero privacy. Get over it." The techno-entrepreneurs who are developing and marketing these tools anticipate good things to come, such as reduced crime rates in urban environments, computer interfaces that will read eye movements and navigate the Web for you, and fingerprint or facial recognition systems and other biometric technologies that guarantee your identity and eliminate the need for passwords, PIN numbers and access cards—even identifying potential terrorists before they can strike.

    58. New York C-Span
    functions are privatized, the more likely that courts will uphold debate exist alongsidecontradictory concerns that tv will chill debate by penalizing
    http://www.commoncause.org/states/newyork/study0501/response.html
    Table of Contents
    Executive Summary

    Recommendations

    Background

    History of Government TV
    ...
    Downloadable Acrobat Version
    Response to the NYS LEGISLATIVE TASK FORCE
    Why the Internet Isn't Enough
    Cost Current NY Production and Distribution Capacity Will A C-SPAN Impact Incumbency? ... Will A C-Span Benefit One House or the Other? A. WHY THE INTERNET ISN’T ENOUGH The June 2000 Assembly-Senate agreement to post audio portions of debates on the Internet made New York the 26th state to offer some form of legislative webcasting, and the eighth state to opt for webcasting instead of gavel-to-gavel TV coverage.    Some observers, including the authors of the Legislature’s 2000 report on gavel-to-gavel TV, recommended using webcasts as an exclusive alternative to television, at least until digital technology alleviates concerns about channel scarcity.   Webcasting proponents suggest that the Internet is cheaper and as effective as television in reaching and educating target audiences. Even assuming that the Senate and Assembly do provide real-time video as well as audio webcasts, an assumption presently untrue of both chambers, webcasts are not an adequate alternative to gavel-to-gavel television broadcasts for three reasons:

    59. Net Family Newsletter
    erate funds), now being challenged in the courts by the Music One Solution tothe MP3 debate sensibly suggests and 6-month-old movies on tv screens have
    http://www.netfamilynews.org/nl010406.html
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    Search engines: They still confuse A two-year study shows that surfers are still confused about how to use Web browser software and search engines. According to Cyberatlas.com , the study, by Alexa Research, found that, "rather than entering a URL into the address field of their Web browsers, millions of Internet users enter the name of the site they want into the search box of their start-up homepage or other search engine." Alexa says it analyzed 42 million search-results pages in 10 major search engines/portals: Altavista.com

    60. The Brookings Institution
    If passing constitutional muster with the courts is one as a reform alternative asthe debate over escalating After the election, the Free tv for Straight Talk
    http://www.brook.edu/gs/cf/sourcebk/chap9.htm

    Brookings

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    Campaign Finance Reform:
    A Sourcebook Abridged Version

    Edited by:
    Anthony Corrado, Thomas E. Mann, Daniel R. Ortiz,
    Trevor Potter, and Frank J. Sorauf

    CHAPTER 9:
    Recent Innovations Anthony Corrado and Daniel Ortiz Documents Day v. Holahan , 34 F.3d 1356 (8th Cir. 1994), cert. denied , 513 U.S. 1127 (1995) Carver v. Nixon , 72 F.3d 633 (8th Cir. 1995), cert. denied , 116 S. Ct. 2579 (1996) Shrink Missouri Government PAC v. Maupin , 71 F.3d 1422 (8th Cir. 1995), cert. denied , 116 S. Ct. 2579 (1996) Vote Choice, Inc. v. DiStefano , 4 F.3d 26 (1st Cir. 1993) Vannatta v. Keisling , 899 F. Supp. 488 (D. Ore. 1995) David Donnelly, Janice Fine, and Ellen S. Miller, "Going Public," Boston Review , vol. 22, no. 2 (April/May 1997), pp. 3-7 Kenneth R. Mayer, "Campaign Finance Reform in the States: A Report to the Governor's Blue Ribbon Commission on Campaign Finance Reform" (Madison, Wisc., February 6, 1997), pp. 4-11 Zach Polett, "Empower Citizens," Boston Review , vol. 22, no. 2 (April/May 1997), p. 12

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