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The Justices defy labels on the First Amendment and violent video games.
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Why they aren't trembling in Tripoli.
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Matching-fund campaign schemes are unconstitutional.
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By Seth Lipsky
Even rich newspaper magnates have the right to a proper jury trial.
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Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts on free speech and why the court struck down Arizona's "Clean Elections" law.
BOOKSHELF
By Ali Soufan
"The Interrogator" tells of how a CIA officer's encounter with a top al Qaeda detainee spurred a rethinking of his own view of coercive interrogation techniques.
The Des Moines Register is out with its first poll of the cycle, and it brings good tidings for the Minnesota Congresswoman.
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MAIN STREET
By William McGurn
Keystone Republicans look like Keystone Kops on education reform.
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GLOBAL VIEW
By Bret Stephens
The Taliban is jubilant at Obama's strategy. So is Iran.
By James Taranto
The decline of marriage isn't the fault of gays.
Monday 4:26 p.m. ET
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Pension-reform strikes would only publicize how good a deal public workers currently get.
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Its familiarity and simplicity often obstructs our respect for watercolor art; a show at the Tate Britain succeeds in eliciting not just our respect but occasional awe.
From Reason Magazine
By Damon Root
Boeing gets hauled before the National Labor Relations Board for opening a new plant in a business-friendly state.
Scholarship on Nazi Germany and the stories of an Auschwitz survivor moved novelist Philip Kerr to set many of his mystery novels in 1930s Berlin.
The Des Moines Register is out with its first poll of the cycle, and it brings good tidings for the Minnesota Congresswoman.
Its familiarity and simplicity often obstructs our respect for watercolor art; a show at the Tate Britain succeeds in eliciting not just our respect but occasional awe.
The New York Philharmonic's presentation of "The Cunning Little Vixen" celebrates lust, life and the cycles of nature.
What is it about Buddy Holly's music that makes such a brief career so enduring?
Has the law of averages finally caught up with Pixar? Meanwhile, "The Names of Love" is satiric, surreal fun, says Joe Morgenstern.
Five Muscovites, part of the last generation schooled in the Soviet system, look back at how much has changed after glasnost and perestroika—and not all for the better.
Julie Taymor finally breaks her silence about her recent misadventures on Broadway.
Massachusetts's Barrington Stage Company shows Broadway how it should have been done, with a revival of "Guys and Dolls."
Pepper...and Salt
From the Media Research Center
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A transcript of the weekend's program:
Paul Gigot talks with Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker. Plus the debt ceiling negotiations and Obama's Afghan drawdown. Tune in this weekend for more: FOX News Channel, Saturday 2 p.m. and 11 p.m. ET.
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