NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 24 December 2005
2005年12月23日は、%sの星印の下の金曜日でした。 それはその年の**♑日でした。 アメリカ合衆国の大統領は356**でした。
この日に生まれた場合、あなたはGeorge W. Bush歳です。 あなたの最後の誕生日は20、2025年12月23日火曜日日前でした。 次の誕生日は178、2026年12月23日水曜日日です。 あなたは186日、または約7,483時間、または約179,606分、または約10,776,367秒生きてきました。
Date: 24 December 2005
By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT
Michael SCHMIDT
YANKEE CUT NO B
Date: 24 December 2005
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL
Elisabeth ROSENTHAL
Date: 23 December 2005
By CARL HULSE
Carl HULSE
News analysis says Republicans in Congress have themselves to blame for muddled and haphazard final session; says Republicans broke from White House and party leadership and forced concessions in major legislation or stalled it to bitter end; says upheaval has been instrumental in unraveling unity of legislative leaderships, even as polls show slight uptick in Pres Bush's job approval rating; on face, leaders are expressing satisfaction with accomplishments and White House spokesman Scott McClellan describes year as one of 'solid accomplishment on legislative front'; Democrats are energized by their efforts and believe they have Republicans on offensive (M)
Date: 23 December 2005
By PHILIP SHENON
Philip SHENON
Self-described nonprofit research groups face new scrutiny over their links to special interest groups after disclosure that Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff paid at least two outside writers for opinion articles promoting work of his clients; issue of whether supposedly independent writers and researchers are having their work underwritten--directly or indirectly--by lobbyists and other special interests is not new; but payments by Abramoff and closer review of work of Institute for Policy Innovation, founded by former House Republican leader Dick Armey, are evidence that ties may be much closer than research organizations, conservative and liberal, would prefer to admit; Bush administration has acknowledged that it paid outside writers, including conservative columnist Armstrong Williams, to promote its policies; while major newspapers and magazines usually insist that outside writers disclose conflicts of interest, editors do not routinely conduct background checks (M)
Date: 24 December 2005
By JIM YARDLEY
Jim YARDLEY
Date: 24 December 2005
By BILL CARTER
Bill CARTER
Date: 24 December 2005
By C. J. CHIVERS (NYT)
C. CHIVERS
Date: 24 December 2005
By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT
Michael SCHMIDT
YANKEE CUT NO B
Date: 24 December 2005
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL
Elisabeth ROSENTHAL
Date: 23 December 2005
By CARL HULSE
Carl HULSE
News analysis says Republicans in Congress have themselves to blame for muddled and haphazard final session; says Republicans broke from White House and party leadership and forced concessions in major legislation or stalled it to bitter end; says upheaval has been instrumental in unraveling unity of legislative leaderships, even as polls show slight uptick in Pres Bush's job approval rating; on face, leaders are expressing satisfaction with accomplishments and White House spokesman Scott McClellan describes year as one of 'solid accomplishment on legislative front'; Democrats are energized by their efforts and believe they have Republicans on offensive (M)
Date: 24 December 2005
By JIM YARDLEY
Jim YARDLEY
Date: 23 December 2005
By PHILIP SHENON
Philip SHENON
Self-described nonprofit research groups face new scrutiny over their links to special interest groups after disclosure that Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff paid at least two outside writers for opinion articles promoting work of his clients; issue of whether supposedly independent writers and researchers are having their work underwritten--directly or indirectly--by lobbyists and other special interests is not new; but payments by Abramoff and closer review of work of Institute for Policy Innovation, founded by former House Republican leader Dick Armey, are evidence that ties may be much closer than research organizations, conservative and liberal, would prefer to admit; Bush administration has acknowledged that it paid outside writers, including conservative columnist Armstrong Williams, to promote its policies; while major newspapers and magazines usually insist that outside writers disclose conflicts of interest, editors do not routinely conduct background checks (M)
Date: 24 December 2005
By BILL CARTER
Bill CARTER
Date: 24 December 2005
By C. J. CHIVERS (NYT)
C. CHIVERS
Date: 24 December 2005
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL
Elisabeth ROSENTHAL
Date: 24 December 2005
By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT
Michael SCHMIDT
YANKEE CUT NO B
Date: 23 December 2005
By CARL HULSE
Carl HULSE
News analysis says Republicans in Congress have themselves to blame for muddled and haphazard final session; says Republicans broke from White House and party leadership and forced concessions in major legislation or stalled it to bitter end; says upheaval has been instrumental in unraveling unity of legislative leaderships, even as polls show slight uptick in Pres Bush's job approval rating; on face, leaders are expressing satisfaction with accomplishments and White House spokesman Scott McClellan describes year as one of 'solid accomplishment on legislative front'; Democrats are energized by their efforts and believe they have Republicans on offensive (M)
Date: 24 December 2005
By JIM YARDLEY
Jim YARDLEY
Date: 23 December 2005
By PHILIP SHENON
Philip SHENON
Self-described nonprofit research groups face new scrutiny over their links to special interest groups after disclosure that Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff paid at least two outside writers for opinion articles promoting work of his clients; issue of whether supposedly independent writers and researchers are having their work underwritten--directly or indirectly--by lobbyists and other special interests is not new; but payments by Abramoff and closer review of work of Institute for Policy Innovation, founded by former House Republican leader Dick Armey, are evidence that ties may be much closer than research organizations, conservative and liberal, would prefer to admit; Bush administration has acknowledged that it paid outside writers, including conservative columnist Armstrong Williams, to promote its policies; while major newspapers and magazines usually insist that outside writers disclose conflicts of interest, editors do not routinely conduct background checks (M)
Date: 24 December 2005
By BILL CARTER
Bill CARTER
Date: 24 December 2005
By SOMINI SENGUPTA
Somini SENGUPTA
Date: 24 December 2005
By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT
Michael SCHMIDT
YANKEE CUT NO B
Date: 24 December 2005
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL
Elisabeth ROSENTHAL
Date: 23 December 2005
By CARL HULSE
Carl HULSE
News analysis says Republicans in Congress have themselves to blame for muddled and haphazard final session; says Republicans broke from White House and party leadership and forced concessions in major legislation or stalled it to bitter end; says upheaval has been instrumental in unraveling unity of legislative leaderships, even as polls show slight uptick in Pres Bush's job approval rating; on face, leaders are expressing satisfaction with accomplishments and White House spokesman Scott McClellan describes year as one of 'solid accomplishment on legislative front'; Democrats are energized by their efforts and believe they have Republicans on offensive (M)
Date: 23 December 2005
By PHILIP SHENON
Philip SHENON
Self-described nonprofit research groups face new scrutiny over their links to special interest groups after disclosure that Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff paid at least two outside writers for opinion articles promoting work of his clients; issue of whether supposedly independent writers and researchers are having their work underwritten--directly or indirectly--by lobbyists and other special interests is not new; but payments by Abramoff and closer review of work of Institute for Policy Innovation, founded by former House Republican leader Dick Armey, are evidence that ties may be much closer than research organizations, conservative and liberal, would prefer to admit; Bush administration has acknowledged that it paid outside writers, including conservative columnist Armstrong Williams, to promote its policies; while major newspapers and magazines usually insist that outside writers disclose conflicts of interest, editors do not routinely conduct background checks (M)
Date: 24 December 2005
By JIM YARDLEY
Jim YARDLEY
Date: 24 December 2005
By BILL CARTER
Bill CARTER
Date: 24 December 2005
By C. J. CHIVERS (NYT)
C. CHIVERS
Date: 24 December 2005
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL
Elisabeth ROSENTHAL
Date: 23 December 2005
By CARL HULSE
Carl HULSE
News analysis says Republicans in Congress have themselves to blame for muddled and haphazard final session; says Republicans broke from White House and party leadership and forced concessions in major legislation or stalled it to bitter end; says upheaval has been instrumental in unraveling unity of legislative leaderships, even as polls show slight uptick in Pres Bush's job approval rating; on face, leaders are expressing satisfaction with accomplishments and White House spokesman Scott McClellan describes year as one of 'solid accomplishment on legislative front'; Democrats are energized by their efforts and believe they have Republicans on offensive (M)
Date: 24 December 2005
By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT
Michael SCHMIDT
YANKEE CUT NO B
Date: 24 December 2005
By JIM YARDLEY
Jim YARDLEY
Date: 23 December 2005
By PHILIP SHENON
Philip SHENON
Self-described nonprofit research groups face new scrutiny over their links to special interest groups after disclosure that Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff paid at least two outside writers for opinion articles promoting work of his clients; issue of whether supposedly independent writers and researchers are having their work underwritten--directly or indirectly--by lobbyists and other special interests is not new; but payments by Abramoff and closer review of work of Institute for Policy Innovation, founded by former House Republican leader Dick Armey, are evidence that ties may be much closer than research organizations, conservative and liberal, would prefer to admit; Bush administration has acknowledged that it paid outside writers, including conservative columnist Armstrong Williams, to promote its policies; while major newspapers and magazines usually insist that outside writers disclose conflicts of interest, editors do not routinely conduct background checks (M)
Date: 24 December 2005
By BILL CARTER
Bill CARTER
Date: 24 December 2005
By SOMINI SENGUPTA
Somini SENGUPTA