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USA Today (Society for the Advancement of Education)
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Articles in Sept 2006 issue of USA Today (Society for the Advancement of Education)
- Latino immigrants negative toward blacks
- The sloppy majority
by Robert J. Bresler
- Fending off bereavement bullies: beware the all-knowing rules maker who, in pat cliches, tells us how we should act and feel, and how long our grief should last and what form it should take
by Carol Shapiro
- Set 'em up in style: cocktails by Jenn
- Museum memo
- Katrina a bust on poverty awareness
- How immigration reform could help alleviate teacher shortages
by Kirk A. Johnson
- The silent sorrow
by Perry-Lynn Moffitt
- Celebrate the most hallowed of holidays
- At Canaan's Edge: America in the King Years 1965-68
by Gerald F. Kreyche
- New laws target campus housing fires
- Driveway dangers for children
- Government cannot solve gas crisis
- Dreaming in Black & White
- When tears are not enough: if called upon to help those walking the anguished path of grief, will we know what to do to help ease their pain and alienation?
by J. Shep Jeffreys
- If you could see what I see
- Workplace cues from back-to-school checklists
- The world isn't flat, it's tilted
- Advertorial adversities
by Joe Saltzman
- The gift of being there for a seriously ill loved one
by Susan Apollon
- Setting the mood for the festivities
- Modern education's "cycle of poverty"
- Kids choosing television over trees
- Napoleon on the Nile
- A system in crisis
by Steve Riczo
- If you combine a diaper bag and a papoose …
- High school dropouts cost country billions
- Why do mothers dress like their daughters?
- "Let them eat cake!" a new PBS documentary examines the many myths surrounding Marie Antoinette, the last queen of France, who met her end on the blade of the guillotine
- Projects that work: being on time, within budget, and to specification can be difficult. As one project manager explained, "you can have it fast, cheap, or good. Pick two."
by Andrew Graham
- Walking my baby back homesafely
- Heat, drought doom wheat and cotton crop
- Sense of entitlement rising among youth
- The gentle clown
by Wes D. Gehring
- Going, going, gone!! Kiss that baby goodbye!
- Standing on a tower, world at your command
- Lizards and snakes … oh, my! The American Museum of Natural History is the ideal showcase for live squamates and their remarkable adaptations for survival, including projectile tongues, deadly venom, amazing camouflage, and sometimes surprising mode
- Girodet: France's Romantic Rebel
- Smokey the bear working overtime
- Is it up to the U.S. to fix the Middle East?
by Chuck Hagel
- Rembrandt at 400: better than ever: the great Dutch master excelled in a number of mediums, as his drawings reveal the artist's keen powers of observation while his printmaking proved to be uniquely bold and innovative
- Don't just play the gamewear it!
- B-Boppin' sound for confounding 'tweens
- Are birds free from the chains of the skyway?
by Gerald F. Kreyche
- Is immigrant detention mimicking drug policies?
- Solving the Middle East
by Llewellyn D. Howell
- Those crazy insanity pleas
by Richard E. Vatz
- Finally, a visor case for sunglasses
- The right tool for the right job
- Number of "illegals" triples earlier estimate
- Three days in North Korea: change canand mustcome to this rogue nation, but it will not be easy, as a trip to this bastion of Communist control proved
by James A. Nathan
- Blessed are those who mournand those who comfort them: in our death-denying society, all too often the message is: Get over it and get back to normal. The fact is, the bereaved's "normal" never will be the same
by Dolores Puterbaugh
- A wake-up call well worth hearing
- Summer blockbusters, old favorites come alive