On June 7th in US Political History
Part V
Part V
On June 7th in 1997 The last US Mail special delivery letter was sent. The service cost was $9.95. It was phased out and replaced by Express Mail for $10.75.
On June 7th in 1999 The FBI put terrorist mastermind Osama Bin Laden on the bureau’s list of the Ten Most Wanted fugitives.
On June 7th in 2000 US District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson ordered the breakup of Microsoft Corporation, declaring the software giant should be split into two because it had "proved untrustworthy in the past." Microsoft vowed to appeal. An appeals court later threw out the breakup order; the Justice Department, under the Bush administration, said it would no longer seek a breakup of Microsoft.
On June 7th in 2001 President Bush signed a $1.3 trillion tax cut bill. It included rising exemptions on estate taxes until 2010 at which point they would return.
On June 7th in 2004 The US Supreme court ordered US highways to be opened to long-haul Mexican trucks, rejecting objections by labor and environmental groups.
On June 7th in 2004 US and South Korean officials announced plans to withdraw a third of 37,000 US troops from South Korea by the end of the following year.
On June 7th in 1999 The FBI put terrorist mastermind Osama Bin Laden on the bureau’s list of the Ten Most Wanted fugitives.
On June 7th in 2000 US District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson ordered the breakup of Microsoft Corporation, declaring the software giant should be split into two because it had "proved untrustworthy in the past." Microsoft vowed to appeal. An appeals court later threw out the breakup order; the Justice Department, under the Bush administration, said it would no longer seek a breakup of Microsoft.
On June 7th in 2001 President Bush signed a $1.3 trillion tax cut bill. It included rising exemptions on estate taxes until 2010 at which point they would return.
On June 7th in 2004 The US Supreme court ordered US highways to be opened to long-haul Mexican trucks, rejecting objections by labor and environmental groups.
On June 7th in 2004 US and South Korean officials announced plans to withdraw a third of 37,000 US troops from South Korea by the end of the following year.
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