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Insight on the News
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Articles in March 18, 2002 issue of Insight on the News
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Cars and stars
by Goode Stephen -
Robo warriors and millennial weapons: the United States will be able to fight swift, decisive victories with few casualtiesbut only as long as we can deny our adversaries the ultimate advantages
by J. Michael Waller -
New-world-order zoning may be coming to your town
by John Elvin -
Angry investors could be political wild card
by Jamie Dettmer - Correction
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Correctness crack-up: in response to the Sept. 11 attacks, students at U.S. colleges and universities are rejecting totalitarian PC doctrines and challenging the power of the left-wing faculty on campus
by Stephen Goode -
Intimate details of a very public marriage
by Henry Taylor -
Symposium
by Wade F. Horn -
Pigheaded comment lands man in Sty
by Goode Stephen -
Federal judge slams fingerprint `science': a ruling by an eminent jurist has opened the door for defense attorneys to challenge the practice of accepting fingerprint-expert testimony as infallible
by Timothy W. Maier -
Celebrities renege on pre-election promises
by John Elvin -
Campaign finance is not the reform we need
by Thomas Sowell -
Enron whistle-blower isn't as pure as portrayed in media
by Hazel O. Edwards -
Will Bush be a man of steel?
by Jennifer G. Hickey -
Gen-Xers turn into ex-spouses: why do so many marriages crash and burn before the couple turns 30? The authors of two new books offer some answers and advice to young people tying the knot
by Cheryl Wetzstein -
Preaching a gospel of self-reliance: the Rev. Jesse Lee Peterson is leading a conservative crusade to get black Americans to focus on Dr. King's dream instead of Jesse Jackson's race-baiting nightmare
by Kenneth R. Timmerman -
A letter from the editor
by Paul M. Rodriguez -
Is big business ethically bankrupt? a boom in business-ethics courses is likely in the wake of the Enron scandal, but critics say these classes need to focus on moral, rather than political, correctness
by John Berlau -
Scammers find cyber-loopholes: the Internet has made it easier for criminals to trick consumers into giving out sensitive personal data
by Kristina Stefanova -
Independent investigation needed for intelligence failures
by Frank Gaffney, Jr. -
These women have something to say
by Goode Stephen -
What does it take to lose a contract? Arthur Andersen's complicity in the Enron fiasco has raised debate about what actions should disqualify contractors from performing government service
by Kelly Patricia O'Meara -
`Digital dirty dozen': the Cato Institute lists examples of bad technology policy to warn Congress away from regulation
by William Glanz -
A little insider trading doesn't bother DNC's McAuliffe
by David Dickson -
Lieberman not making any friends with delay of `No Fear' bill
by Hans S. Nichols -
Chips off a brand new block: by providing young apprentices with hands-on experience, a state-of-the-art foundry is helping sculptors understand the latest technology driving an ancient art
by Brandon Spun -
Did you know?
by John Elvin -
Free press facing challenge to its rights
by Paul M. Rodriguez -
EPA should do its homework instead of attacking critics
by Bonner R. Cohen -
Big Brother hits speed bump in Colorado
by Sean Paige -
Waste, fraud in AIDS programs
by Joyce Howard Price - Mark my words … I mean what I say
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O'Neill taking tough stand in criticizing U.S. tax code
by Hans S. Nichols -
Hospital hazard: in some communities, emergency rooms seem under siege. Health-care officials fear chaos would follow a terrorist strike
by August Gribbin -
EPA's generosity knows few bounds
by John Elvin -
Investigation of exemption is journalism at its finest
by Craig Carlson -
Unfocused federal wildfire effort draws fire from states
by Sean Paige -
Doctors update Hippocratic oath
by Ellen Sorokin -
Bad rap? Poet takes FCC to court
by John Elvin