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October 3, 2005
Seattle's city council will meet Monday to vote on new regulations at strip clubs that include the possible banning of lap dances and strategic placing of dollar bills in dancers' G-strings. The move follows a federal judge's ruling that a moratorium on opening clubs in the city was an unconstitutional restraint on free speech.
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October 3, 2005
Seattle's city council will meet Monday to vote on new regulations at strip clubs that include the possible banning of lap dances and strategic placing of dollar bills in dancers' G-strings. The move follows a federal judge's ruling that a moratorium on opening clubs in the city was an unconstitutional restraint on free speech.
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October 1, 2005
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September 28, 2005
A woman in New York receives a ticket for sitting on a park bench because she didn't have children with her. The Rivington Playground on Manhattan's East Side has a small sign at the entrance that says adults are prohibited unless they are accompanied by a child.
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September 27, 2005
Bill Gates announces his decision to give back to the school responsible for his bank-breaking success in the computer business. Lakeside School in Seattle is receiving $40 million the Microsoft founder who left the school in 1973. The money is intended to fund scholarships to help underprivileged children attend the private school.
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