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IN TODAY'S ENQUIRER:
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ENQUIRER EDITORIAL
The most powerful leader of the most powerful nation in the world was impeached and put on trial to be removed by his own government. Yet for all the loose-cannon hyperbole about coups and wars, the historic struggle was bloodless.
Impeachment vote may follow DeWine
WASHINGTON In his first four years in the U.S. Senate, Republican Mike DeWine has gained recognition as a thoughtful and highly productive legislator, even if he shows more moderate stripes than some of his fellow conservatives would like.
Bury hatchet? Perhaps, but in whose back?
WASHINGTON The official word from President Clinton and congressional leaders in the aftermath of Friday's impeachment vote was that the time had come to bury the hatchet and work together on important policy issues.
Polls support acquittal
WASHINGTON Americans agree with senators who voted to acquit President Clinton of impeachment charges, but they give the Senate low marks for its handling of the trial, polls released Saturday indicate.
Pundits debate fallout
LOS ANGELES After the tapes and the lies, the tears, the betrayals and the trial, the impeachment drama that gripped, then repelled and finally seemed to numb the nation for more than a year is over at last. And in its wake, in the culture it both reflected and so often seemed so disconnected from, it has left what?
Complete text of State of the Union address
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