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NYT > Home Page
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Bleak Sales in December Cap a Grim Year for Automakers
Vehicle sales plunged 53 percent at Chrysler, while G.M., Ford and Toyota all reported declines of between 31 and 37 percent from December a year ago.
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Prosecutors Want Madoff?s Bail Revoked
The disgraced financier Bernard L. Madoff tried to hide at least $1 million in assets from government investigators, federal prosecutors told a judge Monday.
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Israel Drives Deeper Into Gaza, Rebuffing Diplomatic Efforts
As European diplomats sought a cease-fire, Israeli troops poured into Gaza City, expelling residents and shooting militants.
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City Room: A ?Black Box? for Taxicabs?
The city will install windshield-mounted cameras, similar to the "black boxes" in aircraft, which will record data on vehicle use, road accidents and other information in and around cameras.
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The Fifth Down: Wild-Card Weekend
A look at some of the storylines to come out of the first-round games.
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Wheels: Mars Rovers Are Alive at Five
NASA expected its two Mars rovers to survive only three months in the dusty and freezing Martian conditions. But Saturday marked the five-year anniversary of the first robot's landing.
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As 9 Runs End, Hope for a Brighter Future on a Darker Broadway
There is a sense of heavy reckoning on Broadway after nine productions closed on Sunday night.
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Defiant Burris Says Senate Seat Is His
Senate leaders are challenging Roland W. Burris?s appointment, setting the stage for a showdown on Capitol Hill.
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The Caucus: Panetta to Be Named C.I.A. Director
Leon E. Panetta, the former congressman and White House chief of staff, would take over an agency buffeted by criticism.
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Apple?s Jobs Explains His Weight Loss
Steven P. Jobs said that he was being treated for a hormone imbalance but would remain in his job.
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U.S. Sending Emergency Aid to Darfur
President Bush has authorized an immediate airlift of vehicles and equipment to bolster the international peace-keeping mission in the conflict-torn Darfur region of western Sudan.
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New York Housing Plan Is Delayed
Tight financing has pushed back an initiative to create or preserve 165,000 residential units.
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Griffin Bell, Ex-Attorney General, Dies
The dean of Georgia lawyers, Mr. Bell, 90, also served as a federal judge and prominent legal troubleshooter.
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A Top Editor Leaving Washington Post
Passed over for the top job, Philip Bennett decides it is time to leave.
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