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...earliest. But it is held in the deepest of secrecy, with the cardinals sequestered far more tightly than any jury in a celebrity trial in the U.S. A special hotel has been built inside the Vatican to house them during the conclave, and they'll have no access to the outside world - nor will the outside world have any access to them. They'll be allowed to take walks, but only in designated confined spaces within the Vatican. If, during the conclave itself, you hear of any "leaked" reports from inside, you can safely ignore them. We'll be lucky...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Vatican Diary: A New Papacy Begins | 4/16/2005 | See Source »

Such portions of the Act include sections 203, 215, 218, 219, 358, 507 and 508, which collectively grant federal officials broad access to mental health, library, business, financial, and educational records in direct violation of many states’ privacy laws, as well as the Constitutional right to privacy. Many of these same clauses, however (203(b)(d), 215, 218), are set to expire on Dec. 31, 2005 Allowing these to lapse would successfully invalidate some of the most disturbing provisions of the Act, including Section 215, which grants federal access to library records and is cited most frequently...

Author: By John Hastrup and Susan E. Mcgregor, S | Title: POINT/COUNTERPOINT | 4/15/2005 | See Source »

...those of you without access to VH1, here’s a quick and dirty history of popular music from the mid-’90s: The legendary hip-hop collective A Tribe Called Quest were producing socially conscious, jazz-inflected rap, and people were still pretending to care about “electronica.” There was also “The Macarena,” but the less said of that the better...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: POP SCREEN | 4/15/2005 | See Source »

...benefits that states can offer to undocumented immigrants. Congress said that states could no longer offer them in-state tuition rates. For New Mexico’s undocumented immigrants, this meant the cost of higher education had just risen by as much as 400 percent. Immigrants also lost access to scholarships that are available to all New Mexico students who maintain a certain GPA. Working immigrant families found themselves priced out of the market. Their children, who had broken no law, now had no opportunity to get a college education. The rhetoric at the time was that immigrants were leeching...

Author: By Samuel M. Simon, | Title: A Lesson in Courage | 4/13/2005 | See Source »

Students graduating from high school learned that they would not have access to the essentially free education that many of their classmates would receive thanks to scholarships. Students were being told that college wasn’t an option because their parents came from another country. Not surprisingly, they were pissed...

Author: By Samuel M. Simon, | Title: A Lesson in Courage | 4/13/2005 | See Source »

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