Word: benefited
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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What's left for Starr? He continues his probe of Hubbell, who left the Justice Department en route to jail in 1994 but detoured into work for a host of companies friendly to the Democratic Party. Starr has just hired three seasoned prosecutors, in part because he needs the benefit of their judgment as the probe wraps up. His court victory this week could be viewed as a renewed fishing license--allowing him to subpoena notes and depose White House lawyers--but that would be a mistake. After last week, even Starr must know that time is running...
...precisely that. The court, while disagreeing about some issues in the case, unanimously concluded that reducing online communication to a safe-for-kids standard is unconstitutional. "The interest in encouraging freedom of expression in a democratic society," wrote Justice John Paul Stevens, "outweighs any theoretical but unproven benefit of censorship...
...world's rules and Washington the presumption to decide who meets them or fails. Communism is discredited, and China has a long, sorry history of repression and convulsion. Despite the promises Beijing has made, a growing lobby in Washington does not give the People's Republic the benefit of the doubt. Distrust of Beijing has brought together an anti-China odd coupling of human-rights advocates, religious fundamentalists and free traders who claim China seeks to dominate all Asia. These doubters are ready to pounce on any misstep as an excuse for a policy of containment intended to force...
Women who stayed on estrogen for more than 10 years, however, derived a more modest benefit. Reason? Their risk of dying from breast cancer shot up 43%, enough to offset the positive effects of estrogen, Grodstein says, but not enough to eliminate them entirely. Despite the rise in breast-cancer deaths, the researchers found that long-term estrogen users still had a 20% lower death rate. Over the coming years, Grodstein and her colleagues hope to find out what happens when women use estrogen for even longer periods. Does their breast-cancer risk continue to rise, or does it level...
...adopt national standards, the court's minority believed performing the background checks was not too much to ask. Justice John Paul Stevens compared the requirement to ordering local police officers to report the identity of missing children to the federal government. "If Congress believes that such a statute will benefit the people of the nation ... we should respect both its policy judgment and its appraisal of its constitutional power," he wrote...