phone Help-contact

AP Historical Hard Drive 2008

EN_00945865_6708
AP Historical Hard Drive 2008
Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., left, Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole of Kansas, center, and Sen. James Inhoff, R-Okla., talk to reporters on Wednesday, June 7, 1995 on Capitol Hill in Washington after the Senate responded to the Oklahoma City bombing by passing sweeping anti-terrorism legislation that would expand law enforcement's powers and stringently limit appeals by death-row inmates. The $2 billion measure, passed by a 91-8 vote, includes provisions sought by President Bill Clinton to enlarge federal law enforcement agencies and the government's wiretapping authority and allow use of the military in emergencies involving chemical or biological weapons. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
10962 Minimum price 50PLN
1995-06-07
ASSOCIATED PRESS/East News
Associated Press
Wilfredo Lee
2874709
2,06MB
25cm x 17cm by 300dpi
1995, 2, 7, 91-8, A, AFTER, AGENCIES, ALLOW, AND, ANTI-TERRORISM, APPEALS, ARLEN, AUTHORITY, BILL, BILLION, BIOLOGICAL, BOB, BOMBING, BY, CAPITOL, CENTER, CHEMICAL, CITY, CLINTON, DEATH-ROW, DOLE, EMERGENCIES, ENFORCEMENT, ENLARGE, EXPAND, FEDERAL, GOVERNMENT, HILL, IN, INCLUDES, INHOFF, INMATES, INVOLVING, JAMES, JUNE, KANSAS, LAW, LEADER, LEE, LEFT, LEGISLATION, LIMIT, MAJORITY, MEASURE, MILITARY, OF, OKLAHOMA, ON, OR, PASSED, PASSING, POWERS, PRESIDENT, PROVISIONS, R-OKLA, R-PA, REPORTERS, RESPONDED, SEN, SENATE, SOUGHT, SPECTER, STRINGENTLY, SWEEPING, TALK, THAT, THE, TO, USE, VOTE, WASHINGTON, WEAPONS, WEDNESDAY, WILFREDO, WIRETAPPING, WOULD,