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PopeBenedict16th.jpg|thumb|right|140px| The current Pope is Benedict XVI (born Joseph Alois Ratzinger), who was elected at the age of 78 on 19 April 2005.]]

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Gulf Coast braces for 'serious storm'
Thu, 28 Aug 2008 04:57:38 -0000
Gulf Coast residents nervously tracked Tropical Storm Gustav through the Caribbean on Wednesday, and emergency officials readied ...
Immigration debate grips Minn. city
Thu, 28 Aug 2008 03:18:11 -0000
In this southern Minnesota city of about 23,000, an influx of Hispanics has made immigration a topic of heated debate.
Single moms' sons can succeed, new research shows
Thu, 28 Aug 2008 03:53:34 -0000
Many men have bucked conventional wisdom and succeeded alongside single moms.
Miss. coast's post-Katrina recovery not yet complete
Thu, 28 Aug 2008 05:03:08 -0000
There has been much success in the three years since Hurricane Katrina ravaged the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Still, the state of ...
Slow Food Nation event urges 'fresh' recipe, diet revolution
Thu, 28 Aug 2008 02:10:29 -0000
Wholesome, fresh and sustainably grown food deserves a larger place in American diets.
4 inmates accused of helping with N.M. jailbreak
Thu, 28 Aug 2008 00:57:30 -0000
Four jail inmates who authorities say helped eight others make a brazen escape were charged Wednesday, as officials kept up the ...

The Economist: United States

Swing states: New Mexico and Nevada:
Thu, 21 Aug 2008 11:47:15 -0000
Winning votes in the parched south-west is like wrangling scorpionsIN THE film “Swing Vote” a redneck played by Kevin Costner passes out, drunk, on election day. His young daughter votes on his behalf, but an accident means the ballot is not counted. It turns out to be the deciding vote in the presidential race. Mr Costner’s character, Bud Johnson, has ten days to make up his mind. All pretty improbable, except for one detail: the film is set in New Mexico. For two presidential elections in a row, the margin of victory in New Mexico has been narrower than anywhere else. In 2000 Al Gore won by 366 votes; four years later George Bush prevailed by 5,988. Opinion polls point to another close race this year. As Chris Garcia, a political scientist, points out, New Mexico is a bellwether state as well as a close one, at least when it comes to predicting the popular vote. Yet no one can quite explain why. ...
Lexington:
Thu, 21 Aug 2008 11:47:15 -0000
David Axelrod is the architect of Barack Obama’s presidential runONE of the great ironies of the Obama campaign is that the man responsible for crafting the candidate’s hope-filled image is one of the unhappiest-looking men in American politics. David Axelrod persuaded a reluctant Barack Obama to embrace the “Yes We Can” slogan. He insisted from the first that the campaign should be built on the twin pillars of “hope” and “change”. But with his sad eyes and drooping moustache, Mr Axelrod has a perpetual air of gloom hanging over him. He is currently the leading member of one of America’s most powerful clubs—the consultants, spin-meisters, string-pullers and behind-the-scenes operatives who run political campaigns. They are not elected to anything. But they shape American politics just as surely as their glad-handing front-men. Some of them, like Karl Rove (who worked for George Bush until last year) and James Carville (Bill Clinton) in the current generation, and Lee Atwater (George Bush senior) in the previous one, become famous; most of them are perfectly content to grow fat and powerful in the shadows. ...
The presidential race:
Thu, 21 Aug 2008 11:47:15 -0000
John McCain ralliesIT IS an interesting comment on American politics that the first encounter between the two presidential candidates took place in a mega-church presided over by a famous preacher. It is an interesting comment on the American media that Rick Warren—Pastor Rick to the faithful at his church, Saddleback, in California—put on such an impressive performance. He eschewed the gotcha-in-a-flip-flop questions beloved of professional journalists in favour of substantive questions about the candidates’ characters and beliefs. He should be asked to moderate the debates. Barack Obama was everything you might expect—thoughtful and intelligent. But he was also long-winded and at times evasive. The real revelation of the evening was John McCain. He came across as feisty and full of life. A bit bombastic, certainly, and a bit too inclined to rely on his stump speech. But he nevertheless seemed like a man who knew his mind and could sell his beliefs with a joke and an anecdote. ...
The Senate:
Thu, 21 Aug 2008 11:47:15 -0000
Democrats hope to gain effective control of the Senate, which, thanks to its arcane rules, is the main blocker of legislationIN THE midst of a presidential race, it is easy to forget that political power in America extends beyond the White House. Both candidates have big plans; but they will be unable to implement any of them without Congress’s approval. Not that Congress has managed to pass everything it wanted since the Democrats took over in 2007. Several initiatives, not least withdrawing from Iraq, have got nowhere. Ask Democratic leaders why, and they say that the party’s narrow majority in the Senate (49-49, with two independents who are allied with the Democrats) has been unable to overcome Republican obstructionism. So, Democrats say, give us more senators, and we will get more done. ...
The economy:
Thu, 21 Aug 2008 11:47:15 -0000
Sinking standards of living explain why the inflation news is likely to get betterTHE inflation news in America has been ugly. Consumer prices rose 5.6% in the year to July, the fastest clip since 1991. Producer prices rose 9.8%, the most since 1981. Fuel and food are mostly to blame; but even excluding them “core” consumer and producer inflation have both picked up.This may, however, be as bad as it gets. Not only have international commodity prices turned down decisively, but America’s state of near-recession means that it will be hard for workers to secure wage rises that match, let alone exceed, the inflation rate. That is a painful but unavoidable result of Americans’ changed economic circumstances: what they buy has become more expensive relative to what they sell. ...
Midwestern wine:
Thu, 21 Aug 2008 11:47:15 -0000
Sniffing a fine bouquet of Chateau Michiganne STATE fairs are not known for high culture. Corn dogs, funnel cake—burst seams are made of these. But at Wisconsin’s state fair earlier this month, not too far from the racing pigs and the Cream Puff Pavilion, a genteel group sipped Wisconsin-made wine. The state’s industry is tiny but growing, from 13 wineries in 1995 to 41 last year, according to WineAmerica, a lobby group. Wineries are cropping up in unexpected places. Some states, such as Wisconsin, import most of their grapes. Others have seen small farmers, seeking new hobbies and higher margins, grow their own. Many politicians are encouraging them, keen to boost tourism and rural economies. In 1975, 34 states had wineries. Now all 50 do. ...

 
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