Jeff Taylor from the October 2006 issue
The Ohio Supreme Court rules that Buckeye State cities can’t use eminent domain powers to claim land for economic development schemes. The City of Norwood had tried to take 70 middle-income homes and turn them into a private $125 million mixed-use development.
U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker refuses to dismiss a suit against AT&T, and by extension the National Security Agency, over secret, warrantless wiretaps allegedly installed on AT&T fiberoptic lines. Walker dismisses government claims that the operation is a state secret, explaining, “Plaintiffs made no agreement with the government and are not bound by any implied covenant of secrecy.”
Toyota says it is moving toward gasoline-electric hybrid cars with bigger batteries and the ability to recharge at any common electrical outlet—a key range-boosting feature.
The Lower Manhattan Development Corporation does the unthinkable for a government agency: It puts itself out of business. Created in the wake of 9/11, the public corporation has achieved its goal of spurring development, officials say.
Consumers reject closed technologies from two of the world’s biggest brands. Disney’s $135 million ESPN Mobile cell phone service flounders, and retailers pull Sony’s proprietary “universal movie discs” from shelves.
Contra the assumptions of the public health diet cops, people seem to know what they’re eating. Almost 80 percent of respondents to an AP-Ipsos poll report they read food labels in grocery stores.
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