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Insight on the News
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Articles in June 3, 2002, issue of Insight on the News
- EPA meddling meant to undermine administration?
by Sean Paige
- A bumper crop of summer films: fears of a box-office slump in the wake of the events of Sept. 11 proved overly apprehensive. About 90 new releases are headed our way during the next 18 weekends
by Gary Arnold
- Woolsey wary of more attacks; former CIA director James Woolsey says the U.S. could ensure a more peaceful world by toppling Iraq's Saddam Hussein and ceasing its toleration of Mideast tyrants
by Paula Kaufman
- Court decision on virtual child porn draws debate
- White trashing: Michael Moore thinks white men are byronic: mad, bad and dangerous to know
by Rex Roberts
- Symposium
by Ivo H. Daalder
- Americans must be told the truth about Oklahoma City
- Freedom to farm or freedom to freeload?
by Sean Paige
- Restricting reality; parents watching news on television may be giving their children an education in subjects that would be rated R in theaters
by Karen Goldberg Goff
- Lawyers' stranglehold causes medical crisis in Mississippi
by Eric Peters
- Select few movies get the Vietnam experience right
by Samuel D. High
- Capital deals with full plate
by Paul M. Rodriguez
- State of the media
by Jennifer Harper
- Gay lobby scrambles to hide truth about child molestation
by Louis P. Sheldon
- A letter from the editor
by Paul M. Rodriguez
- Breaking omerta: before Gerald Shur, godfather of the U.S. federal witness-protection program, took action, those courageous enough to break the code of silence that sheltered organized crime faced the risk of being killed for testifying
by Timothy W. Maier
- Bald eagle remains endangered; America's national symbol was to have flown off the endangered species list, but the bird remains captive in a bureaucratic nest of guidelines and regulations
by Audrey Hudson
- Leahy presides over judicial-vacancy crisis
by John Nowacki
- Putting a brave face on plastic surgery and snake charming
by Stephen Goode
- Not much stock in `put' conspiracy: the attacks on New York City and Washington have led to a new urban legendnamely, that inside traders used `put' options on airline stocks to line terrorist pockets
by Kelly Patricia O'Meara
- Cease fire! You're disturbing the plovers
by John Elvin
- As Woolsey's star rises, Tenet likely to fall
by Jamie Dettmer
- One good turn
by Stephen Goode
- Will third parties run to victory? Candidates from the Libertarian and the Green parties collected enough votes in 2000 to shift the balance of national politics. This year, their eyes are on bigger prizes
by Sam MacDonald
- Media hoaxer Joey Skaggs strikes again
by John Elvin
- Does Puerto Rico deserve independence?
by Ralph De Toledano
- Jefferson's descendants a grave matter for Monticello Association
by Hans S. Nichols
- Censorship on college campuses: some students took radical steps to suppress an ad that David Horowitz sent to campus newspapers, but at least two editors stood boldly behind the First Amendment
by Stephen Goode
- Did you know?
by John Elvin
- Bush belatedly blasts judicial vacancies
by Hans S. Nichols
- Russia may prove to be erstwhile ally; George W. Bush's upcoming summit with Vladimir Putin promises to increase cooperation between Washington and Moscow, but Kremlin-watchers warn the path is full of diplomatic and policy land mines
by J. Michael Waller
- Good people are hard to find for OPM
by John Elvin
- Security fee might be headed sky high
by Hans S. Nichols
- Land mines still waiting to explode; there is a growing dispute between those who believe mines are vital to legitimate defenses and those who see them as cruel weapons that kill long after wars are over
by Brandon Spun
- Mark my words … I mean what I say
by John Elvin