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Insight on the News
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Articles in July 22, 2002, issue of Insight on the News
- Revolutionary words still offer inspiration
by Stephen Goode
- Tiny think tank gets big press: linguists are creating a stir by translating, accurately, Arabic news stories
by Sean Salai
- Hillary Clinton, 50 percent off!
by John Elvin
- Identity theft has become a new threat to national security
by Douglas Burton
- More trouble for Ted Turner
by Jennifer Harper
- Mark my words … I mean what I say
- Saddam's position is tenuous, but will U.S. be ready to exploit it?
by Douglas Burton
- Say goodbye to the west as we know it: noted historian John Lukacs brings a lifetime of scholarship to a book that seeks to sum up the last 500 years of history
by Stephen Goode
- Bolton is on duty as America's sentry; undersecretary of state John R. Bolton is determined to see that rogue states do not obtain weapons of mass destruction and is committed to a U.S. missile defense
by Paula R. Kaufman
- Battling political correctness and liberalism on campus
- Strong dissent from those who favor the department of homeland security
by Sean Paige
- Frank talk: `Frank'ophiles may want to buy the new Sinatra collection, but the six-CD box isn't for the casual fan
by Dick Heller
- - symposium - democracy Russia
by Curt Weldon
- Are Supreme Court justices here to lead or to follow?
by Wayne Lela
- A crisis of confidence
by Jennifer G. Hickey
- No. 1 tries harder: America's first president is having his image burnished as Mount Vernon expands
by Amaris Elliott-Engel
- Would Palestinian statehood be beginning of the end for Israel?
by Don Feder
- Would reparations heal the wounds of slavery, Jim Crow?
by Pamela A. Hairston
- Security blanket: here are details of the proposed Department of Homeland Security and the inside story of how it was planned in utmost secrecy. Will Congress agree to this major reorganization, and if so will it be good for the United States?
by J. Michael Waller
- Where Jefferson went to unwind
by Gabriella Boston
- Bush must maintain his focus in fighting war on terror
by Mona Charen
- Charge an error to baseball for its mishandling of Cubans
by Kim Kreger
- Harry Bingham: profile in courage: U.S. Foreign Service officer ignored his bosses at Foggy Bottom and saved thousands of Jews from the Nazis, at the cost of his career. Now State is honoring him
by Martin Edwin Andersen
- Research becomes trade tool: increased utilization of faulty science to block trade is a reflection of the enormous success in reducing tariffs on farm products, according to agricultural-trade officials
by Carter Dougherty
- Forest service blowing smoke over the deaths of firefighters
by Michelle Malkin
- Clarification
- UAW lawyers skirt the rules of law; some observers charge that, in winning a controversial jury verdict, the United Auto Workers legal team used shady tactics that amounted to obstruction of justice
by Michael F. Munday
- Adult stem-cell research shows promise
by Joyce Howard Price
- WorldCom may force administration's hand
by Jamie Dettmer
- A letter from the editor
by Paul M. Rodriguez
- Al-Qaeda's links in the Balkans; Macedonian officials contend the Bush administration largely is ignoring intelligence information that has connected al-Qaeda elements to Albanian separatists
by Jamie Dettmer
- Bulgarians, Slovaks, Uzbeks invade upstate New York
by John Elvin
- Kerr: patron saint of campus radicals
by Susan L.M. Huck
- Women taking their time to pick spouses, but at what cost?
by Stephen Goode
- Terror witnesses may be left in cold; the U.S. Marshals' witness-protection program is teetering on the brink of collapse, the victim of gross financial mismanagement and of political vengeance
by Timothy W. Maier
- Tough-talking Taki takes on neo-cons
by John Elvin