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Ballbug (Free subscription) | 10/01/2008
Michael S. Schmidt / New York Times : Drug Testers Notified Teams in Minors — When George J. Mitchell issued his report last December on the use of performance-enhancing drugs in baseball, Commissioner Bud Selig quickly embraced the report's findings. He then went further, saying baseball would immediately end a practice under …
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Asiaing.com (Free subscription) | 06/08/2008
Senator George J. Mitchell, the chairman of DLA Piper, today released the report of his independent investigation into the illegal use of steroids and other performance enhancing substances by players in Major League Baseball. Senator Mitchell was named in March 2006 by the Commissioner of Baseball, Allan H. Selig, to conduct the investigation. He led a national team of lawyers from...
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http://www.enewschannels.com/feed/ (Free subscription) | 05/15/2008
PHILADELPHIA, Pa. — Eisenhower Fellowships has announced that it will present the 2008 Dwight D. Eisenhower Medal for Leadership and Service to former U.S. Senate Majority Leader George J. Mitchell. Eisenhower Chairman General Colin L. Powell USA (Retired) will present the award to Senator Mitchell at its annual board of trustees’ dinner in Philadelphia on [...]
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California Newswire (Free subscription) | 05/12/2008
PHILADELPHIA, Pa. — Eisenhower Fellowships has announced that it will present the 2008 Dwight D. Eisenhower Medal for Leadership and Service to former U.S. Senate Majority Leader George J. Mitchell. Eisenhower Chairman General Colin L. Powell USA (Retired) will present the award to Senator Mitchell at its annual board of trustees’ dinner in Philadelphia on [...]
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San Fransisco Chronicle (Free subscription) | 04/11/2008
Four months after George J. Mitchell released his report on the use of performance-enhancing drugs in baseball, Major League Baseball and the players union agreed Friday to amend the sport's drug-testing policy for the third time in four years. The revised...
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Knowledge@Wharton (Free subscription) | 04/03/2008
When a report prepared by former Senator George J. Mitchell indicated that Roger Clemens and others used illegal, performance-enhancing drugs, a marketing agency prepared a voluminous report that relied on statistics to make the case for Clemens' innocence. But an article written by four Wharton faculty -- Justin Wolfers, Shane Jensen, Abraham Wyner and Eric Bradlow -- questions the methodology used...