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News Chirac tries to salvage EU constitution vote in TV town hall meeting
Chirac tries to salvage EU constitution vote in TV town hall meeting
Russell Adkins
April 14, 2005 08:43:00 pm

Fighting off a barrage of opposition to the agreement, French President Jacques Chirac embarked Thursday on a campaign to save the proposed European Union constitution from defeat in an upcoming national referendum. With the anti-treaty...

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News Chinese court bars evidence obtained through torture
Chinese court bars evidence obtained through torture
Russell Adkins
April 14, 2005 07:55:00 pm

A provincial appeals court has issued what is reported to be China's first ruling that confessions obtained by coercion, torture, or trickery cannot be used in court, and while defense attorneys hailed the decision as an important step toward...

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News Prosecutors seek June trial for Kenneth Lay
Prosecutors seek June trial for Kenneth Lay
Russell Adkins
April 4, 2005 09:06:00 pm

Federal prosecutors argued Monday that it would be in the public interest for former Enron CEO Kenneth Lay to face trial this summer - no later than June -...

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News Court upholds California gay partnership law
Court upholds California gay partnership law
Russell Adkins
April 4, 2005 08:26:00 pm

California's Third District Court of Appeal Monday rejected a challenge to the state's domestic partnership law granting same-sex partners a body of rights almost identical to those enjoyed by the state's married couples, including automatic parental status and...

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News Annan  awaits new Oil-for-Food report
Annan awaits new Oil-for-Food report
Russell Adkins
March 28, 2005 09:28:00 pm

A new interim report on the UN Oil-for-Food Program for Iraq is set to be released Tuesday, and officials within the Bush administration believe that the conflict-of-interest findings might place US Secretary-General Kofi Annan's job...

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News UN mission to Burundi recommends creating war crimes court
UN mission to Burundi recommends creating war crimes court
Russell Adkins
March 28, 2005 07:45:00 pm

The UN special mission to Burundi has recommended that the nation create a non-judicial truth commission and special prosecuting chamber within its court system in order to deal with perpetrators of genocide, crimes against humanity, and war...

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News Sudan arrests 15 officials charged with Darfur crimes
Sudan arrests 15 officials charged with Darfur crimes
Russell Adkins
March 28, 2005 10:05:00 am

Sudanese justice minister Ali Mohamed Osman Yassin announced Monday that 15 Sudanese military officials have been arrested and accused of human rights offenses including rape, burning of villages and killings in the Darfur region, marking the first arrests of...

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News Former Yukos security chief convicted of murder
Former Yukos security chief convicted of murder
Russell Adkins
March 24, 2005 09:33:00 pm

The former head of security for fallen Russian oil giant Yukos has been convicted of murder and attempted murder in a Russian court, the first conviction among former Yukos executives being held in Russia. Lawyers for Alexei...

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News FEC weighing regulation of Internet political activity
FEC weighing regulation of Internet political activity
Russell Adkins
March 24, 2005 08:03:00 pm

The Federal Election Commission took tentative first steps in regulating Internet political activity Thursday by calling for public input on limited campaign guidelines for the medium. While commissioners expressed a reluctance to regulate online speech in any...

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News France ending 35-hour work week
France ending 35-hour work week
Russell Adkins
March 21, 2005 09:47:00 pm

French lawmakers are expected on Tuesday to strike the final blow to the nation's maligned 35-hour work week , ending the national experiment lauded by workers but criticized as a drain on the country's economy. With national unemployment...

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Latest DISPATCHES
Peru dispatch: protesters demand new elections as death toll from political violence surges under newly sworn-in president

Peru dispatch: protesters demand new elections as death toll from political violence surges under newly sworn-in president

UK dispatch: leading barristers say that Britain’s courts are crumbling

UK dispatch: leading barristers say that Britain’s courts are crumbling

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THIS DAY @ LAW

First Non-Aligned Movement conference closes

On September 6, 1961, the Non-Aligned Movement concluded its first official conference in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. The organization was founded in 1955 to support mostly developing countries who did not wish to side with either of the great Cold War powers. It also worked to shepherd these nations through the process of decolonization.

Learn more
about the history and founding principles of the Non-Aligned Movement.

Pilgrims leave Plymouth, England for North America

On September 6, 1620, the Pilgrims left Plymouth, England. They set sail on the Mayflower for North America, where they would found the Plymouth Colony in modern-day Massachusetts.
While in transit, the Pilgrims promulgated the Mayflower Compact, which would serve as their colony's first governing document.

Law requiring German Jews to wear star announced

On September 6, 1941, German authorities announced the adoption of a regulation, formally enacted on September 1, requiring all Jews in German territories to wear a star. Read an English translation of the Police Decree Concerning the Marking of Jews.

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