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Bring back the corporate income tax before it goes the way of the dodo

OPINION Like a comet losing its mass as it makes its way through the cosmos, so too is the corporate income tax shedding its fiscal mass. With help from the anti-tax cabal in Washington, corporate income taxes are providing a smaller and smaller portion of the monies needed to keep the country operating.

Tragedy of Iraq war vets: Re-enlisting in the Grand Army of the Poor

OPINION According to a Feb. 8 Christian Science Monitor report by Alexandra Marks, “The number of homeless vets is rising, in part because of high housing costs and gaps in pay.”

Caring about women and babies

OPINION I recently heard Don Sloan talk about his book on his perspectives on women’s reproductive choices after several decades’ worth of experiences as a doctor who performs abortions. It prompted me to make the following suggestion. To meaningfully address the reproductive choice/ abortion issue, I propose asking thousands of women presenting to abortion clinics this question: “If you could change the world in any way, what changes would it take for you to be able to carry your pregnancy to term?”

EDITORIALS

Women: Image and reality / Make 2005 a peace year

Deaths and injuries at U.S. Steel: Whos to blame?

Accidents continue to happen — more and more frequently — at U.S. Steel. Three workers have died at U.S. Steel mills since September, according to United Steelworkers union officials: a crane operator at the Gary Works (Ind.) in September; a management employee at Gary who died of carbon monoxide poisoning in December; and a union worker who was crushed by a slow-moving train this month at the Granite City Works in Illinois.

New cuts in college aid

WASHINGTON — The president’s recently released 2006 budget will cut education funding. It will increase the maximum Pell Grant award by $100 in each of the next five years, but eliminate over 48 programs in the Department of Education that total $4.2 billion in cuts.

New York City 1, Wal-Mart 0

NEW YORK — The NYC Free Wal-Mart Coalition (NFWC) received a surprisingly quick first victory Feb. 24 when mall developers in Rego Park, Queens, rescinded their offer of a spot for Wal-Mart in a proposed shopping center.

War budget fuels drive for empire

A full accounting of the annual costs of “permanent war” goes far beyond the official defense budget. But that is a good place to start.

Cingular workers OK job actions

ATLANTA — More than 5,300 Cingular Wireless workers voted overwhelmingly Feb. 25 to authorize their union leadership to call legal work actions, including a possible strike, to press their demands upon the giant telecom firm.

You cant shoot a good dog

For 15 weeks, members of Local 11 of The Newspaper Guild-CWA have been on strike against the Youngstown-based Vindicator Printing Co., which refuses to speak to them.

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