Word: indiana
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ARRESTED. WILLIAM DAVIS, 33, convicted sex offender and one of the FBI's most-wanted fugitives, currently facing charges of molesting three Indiana boys last year; two days after talk-show host Oprah Winfrey broadcast his photo on her show and offered $100,000 for tips leading to his capture; in Fargo...
...make gajillions and quadrazillions of dollars, knows about powerful questions. He’s asked us about slavery, the Holocaust, being kind to space aliens, and most importantly about the very fabric of our lives, and whether or not that fabric can be purchased with the “Indiana Jones” DVD box set. He certainly left me with a powerful question at the end of his current summer blockbuster. Why hasn’t someone put Dakota Fanning in a dark hole and left her there for a very long time? Actually, the film raised other questions...
...house more than 380,000 Katrina survivors in shelters and hotels, serve nearly 9.8 million hot meals, and provide mental-health counseling to more than 235,000 people. "One thing the Red Cross has learned since 9/11," says Eugene Tempel, executive director of the Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University, "is the importance of communicating more openly, more deliberately...
...likely, say Republicans. Leonard Leo, executive vice president of the Federalist Society and a White House advisor on the Roberts nomination, says Roberts is too smart to get drawn in. "He knows it's about 51 votes," Leo says. Former Indiana Representative David McIntosh says Roberts is focused on keeping his far right supporters happy while reassuring centrist Republicans who are the key to his confirmation. Roberts' six-minute opening remarks today managed to cram in tips of the hat to both groups. For the hardliners, he argued the importance of rule of law over individual rights. For the centrists...
...field seats, a handful of glass-fronted booths had been doled out to politicians and Washington insiders. Judiciary Chair Arlen Specter grilled Roberts on Roe v. Wade right from the start, as skybox onlookers such as former Solicitor General Ted Olson, former Presidential candidate Gary Bauer and former Indiana Representative David McIntosh crammed into Box 3e to watch the hearing on closed circuit television. It was a private setting, which Bauer and McIntosh, for their part, put to use for a quick briefing by nomination-strategy staffers from the offices of Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist and Judiciary Committee member...