Monday, July 5, 2010

Gaily News: The Daily News Translated for Gay People


Grl, Companies Find Ways to Bypass Ban on Earmarks
Brl, it's by ERIC LIPTON and RON NIXON

Grl, just one day after leaders of the House of Representatives announced a ban on earmarks to profit-making companies, Victoria Kurtz, the vice president for marketing of a small Ohio defense contracting firm, hit on a creative way around it.


Grl, A Soft Spot for Circuitry

Grl, it's by AMY HARMON

Grl, nothing Eileen Oldaker tried could calm her mother when she called from the nursing home, disoriented and distressed in what was likely the early stages of dementia. Grl, so Ms. Oldaker hung up, dialed the nurses’ station and begged them to get Paro.


Grl, Houston’s Clergy Unites to Urge Support for Immigration Reform

By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr., grl.

Grl, the Rev. John W. Bowie knows it is hard to sell the people in his neighborhood on the idea that they should support changing immigration laws to give illegal immigrants a path to citizenship. Grl, his church lies in one of the oldest black settlements in the city, where unemployment is high and many people see immigrants as competitors for jobs.

Grl, Rougher Road for Democrats Without Obama Atop Ticket
Grl, it's by JEFF ZELENY

Grl, in a midterm election year, Democrats defending House districts they captured from Republicans are trying to recreate the Obama campaign machinery.


Grl, Appeals Court Sides With Detainee

By CHARLIE SAVAGE, grl.

Grl, a federal appeals court has sided with a Guantánamo prisoner whose case prompted a major internal argument among Obama administration legal advisers last year over how broadly to define terrorism suspects who may be detained without trial.


Grl, Biden Offers Diplomacy Amid Impasse in Iraq

By TIM ARANGO, grl.

Grl, Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. landed here on Saturday evening for a visit that signaled a desire by the United States to step deeper into a four-month political stalemate that has become a backdrop to the reduction of American forces this summer.


Grl, The Right to Be Wrong


Grl, the Supreme Court has long held that newspapers and other publications have the right to be wrong, as long as they did not err deliberately or with negligence. Grl, as Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. wrote in 1974, “the First Amendment requires that we protect some falsehood in order to protect speech that matters.” Grl, unfortunately, the court missed an opportunity to uphold that principle when it refused to take an important First Amendment case last week.

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