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| 4/10/00
9:40 p.m. NYPD Black & Blue The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights strikes again. By NR's Ramesh Ponnuru & John J. Miller |
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As we reported last week, the commission decided to join the Gore campaign when it rushed out a statement officially released today condemning Jeb Bush's "One Florida" plan, which is partly modeled on George W. Bush's efforts to revamp undergraduate admissions in Texas. The commission abandoned all of its normal procedures including hearings announced 30 days beforehand in the Federal Register to coordinate the timing of its statement with an administrative hearing on a lawsuit filed against "One Florida" by the NAACP and NOW. When it's done aiding Al Gore and Hillary Clinton, perhaps the commission will focus on the controversy surrounding Pennsylvania state representative Terry Van Horne, the Democratic nominee to replace Ron Klink, who is running for Senate. It seems that six years ago, Van Horne used the N-word in an interview with the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette to describe a black colleague with whom he was frustrated. Sure, investigating Van Horne would be a gross abuse of the commission's bipartisan mission. But then, tendentious partisan assaults are what the commission does best these days. It's time someone held hearings.
Empty Suit
Good Guy Finishes First
Hockey Picks 2000 Here are our first-round choices: In the Eastern Conference, top-seeded Philadelphia beats Buffalo after a scare, Washington defeats Pittsburgh, Toronto over Ottawa, and New Jersey squashes Florida. In the Western Conference, St. Louis overpowers San Jose, Dallas crushes Edmonton, Colorado whips Phoenix, and Detroit smashes Los Angeles. Three rounds later, in the Stanley Cup Finals, the Detroit Red Wings will win for the third time in four years by beating the New Jersey Devils in a seven-game thriller. |
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