Former Washington Mayor Marion Barry declared himself vindicated in his latest run-in with the law Thursday after federal prosecutors decided not to pursue stalking charges against him.
In 1990, the FBI busted Washington, D.C., Mayor Marion Barry for crack cocaine. Today, the 68-year-old self-proclaimed "mayor for life" is back in politics, serving on the D.C. City Council.
As Hurricane Ivan prepares to slam into the Gulf Coast early tomorrow, John Kerry's last chance to make big news this week is probably today. And so he shall, according to aides who call his morning speech in Detroit, Michigan, his biggest economic talk of the season.
President Bush stares down the controversy over his military service today with a speech before the National Guard in Las Vegas, Nevada. Back east, Porter Goss, the president's pick for CIA director, stares down tough questioning about the 9/11 commission report in his first day of Senate confirmation hearings.
President Bush and John Kerry campaign today in battlegrounds Colorado and Florida, respectively. If not respectfully. But the political headlines this morning come out of South Dakota and Alabama, where tight elections with echoes of comebacks kept us guessing till early this morning.
District Mayor Marion Barry got a big laugh last month when he observed that his plan for a new prison would draw no opposition from the folks in the Congressional Cemetery, which adjoins the propo...
Former Washington Mayor Marion Barry declared himself vindicated in his latest run-in with the law Thursday after federal prosecutors decided not to pursue stalking charges against him.
In 1990, the FBI busted Washington, D.C., Mayor Marion Barry for crack cocaine. Today, the 68-year-old self-proclaimed "mayor for life" is back in politics, serving on the D.C. City Council.
As Hurricane Ivan prepares to slam into the Gulf Coast early tomorrow, John Kerry's last chance to make big news this week is probably today. And so he shall, according to aides who call his morning speech in Detroit, Michigan, his biggest economic talk of the season.
President Bush stares down the controversy over his military service today with a speech before the National Guard in Las Vegas, Nevada. Back east, Porter Goss, the president's pick for CIA director, stares down tough questioning about the 9/11 commission report in his first day of Senate confirmation hearings.
President Bush and John Kerry campaign today in battlegrounds Colorado and Florida, respectively. If not respectfully. But the political headlines this morning come out of South Dakota and Alabama, where tight elections with echoes of comebacks kept us guessing till early this morning.
District Mayor Marion Barry got a big laugh last month when he observed that his plan for a new prison would draw no opposition from the folks in the Congressional Cemetery, which adjoins the propo...
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