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"The NCAA has declared that it will begin banning schools from using "hostile" or "abusive" nicknames and logos during post-season sporting events, in an effort to force some 18 colleges and universities to drop team names such as the Braves and the Indians". National Review. FindArticles.com. 28 Dec, 2009. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1282/is_16_57/ai_n15333426/
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Articles in Sept 12, 2005 issue of National Review
- The National Prison Rape Elimination Commission held hearings recently in San Francisco
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Mozart minus one
by Jay Nordlinger - Hunter S. Thompson, the counterculture's favorite writer, who shuffled off this mortal coil six months ago by firing a bullet into his drug-addled brain, has finally been laid to rest in an appropriately eccentric style
- Poor Kofi Annan. It must be so hard to run the world when everyone around you is a crook
-
The GOP's immigration problem: will the elites get a clue?
by John O'Sullivan -
Challenging Chavez
by Thor Halvorssen - The Israeli military evacuated the last Jewish settlers from Gaza
-
Rules of the game: how Democratic senators will try to trip John Roberts up
by Shannen W. Coffin - Is there a doctor in the house?
- The appointment of Jay Lefkowitz as the new U.S. human-rights envoy for North Korea might be dismissed as an exercise in futility
-
Who are we? An ancient, many-faced question, now with acute relevance
by David Frum -
Redemption at Hogwarts
by Ross G. Douthat -
Not so intelligent
by Kale Bongers - Hawaii senator Daniel Akaka, a Democrat, is proposing legislation that would allow native Hawaiians to govern themselves in the same manner as American Indians
-
Ethnic cleansing, continued: the fate of Serbs in Kosovo
by Jason Lee Steorts -
From the Cindy Sheehan inbox, September 2006 …
by Rob Long -
Grand Tour
by John Derbyshire - John Paul II founded World Youth Day, a periodic religious gathering, and conditioned us to see such events as Roman Catholic Woodstocks
- Our country's educational system has lost a gem with the recent death of Johns Hopkins University professor Julian Stanley
- London will apparently crack down on Al-Tajdeed Radio, which preaches violent jihad
- It is hard for the visitor to Italy to avoid the impression of a country not well run, perhaps even a sort of First World failed state in the making
-
Next-day thought in Britain
by William F. Buckley, Jr. -
Hating America, hating humanity: yup, that's what they doespecially the intellectuals
by Paul Johnson - We are told ad nauseam that European diplomacy is superior to George W. Bush's "unilateralism."
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- Let's say you're a Democratic senator
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Yes to senator no: an interview with Jesse Helms
by Jay Nordlinger -
Myth
by Mary Ewald -
Primary reform
by Bill Whalen - Ohio's Bob Taft was never our favorite governor
- The NCAA has declared that it will begin banning schools from using "hostile" or "abusive" nicknames and logos during post-season sporting events, in an effort to force some 18 colleges and universities to drop team names such as the B
-
Not so realistic: why some would-be immigration reformers don't have the answer
by Mark Krikorian -
The Cesspool
by William F. Buckley, Jr. - To the history of high culture in the land of l'art pour l'art, add this episode: In Strasbourg's Palais de la Musique, the German conductor Volker Hartung mounted the podium to lead his orchestra in an encore, gave the downbeatand was promptly drag
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-
A man who knew his century: Arthur Koestler, born 100 years ago
by David Pryce-Jones -
Mother wit
by Susan Konig -
Looking aheadoil
by William F. Buckley, Jr. - "Roberts Resisted Women's Rights," headlined a front-page Washington Post article examining memos the Supreme Court nominee wrote as a young counsel in the Reagan White House
- Enforcement first
- William Weld, Republican governor of Massachusetts from 1991 to 1997, now wants to be governor of New York
- In the teeth of fierce accusations of "racism" and "elitism" by opponents, and with the support of Mayor Shirley Franklin , the city council of Atlanta has enacted a measure to ban panhandling from a large zone of the city's downtown
- Two Sheehans
- The "Able Danger" controversy is a moving target
- Was there anyone not offended by our August 8 cover of Sen. Charles Schumer as an inquisitor?
-
The Arafat model: some leaders in Iraq are following it, and they must not get away with it
by Michael Rubin -
Clinton hits a bump
by W.H. von Dreele -
Edmund Wilson, at last
by Jeffrey Hart - The druggies' drug of choice these days seems to be meth, but the drug warriors' drug of choice is still pot
- Birth pains
- In the Iraqi city of Mosul, Faris Yunis Abdullah and two other Sunni election workers were putting up voting posters
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Politically correct
by Jim Huber -
Bug-Out Fever
by W.H. von Dreele - The campaign against terror in Afghanistan and Iraq has scrambled the geopolitical cards far and wide
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Cindy's movement: is this what the antiwar people really want?
by Byron York
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