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[alac-forum] I can't believe you forgot!



Hey there,

Ra[t]es dropped last week ... Jump on it!
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Best Regards,

Amy Johnson 
Customer Support
Harrington  Holdings Co. 




















The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe was invited to monitor 
the election by the State Department. The observers will come from the OSCE's 
Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights.It will be the first time 
such a team has been present for a U.S. presidential election."The U.S. is 
obliged to invite us, as all OSCE countries should," spokeswoman Urdur 
Gunnarsdottir said. "It's not legally binding, but it's a political commitment. 
They signed a document 10 years ago to ask OSCE to observe elections."Thirteen 
Democratic members of the House of Representatives, raising the specter of 
possible civil rights violations that they said took place in Florida and 
elsewhere in the 2000 election, wrote to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan in 
July, asking him to send observers.After Annan rejected their request, saying 
the administration must make the application, the Democrats asked Secretary of 
State Colin Powell to do so.The issue was hotly debated in the Ho!
use, and Republicans got an amendment to a foreign aid bill that barred federal 
funds from being used for the United Nations to monitor U.S. elections, The 
Associated Press reported.In a letter dated July 30 and released last week,