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Just when free-market capitalists thought they were home free, voters came and hit them upside the head
By Jonathan Broder
June 5, 1997
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A vicious attack in Johannesburg galvanizes a worldwide response.
By Alan Brody
June 4, 1997
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A defense correspondent, interviewing bestselling author Tom Clancy and retired Gen. Fred Franks about their new book on the Gulf War, steps into a minefield.
By John Donnelly
June 4, 1997
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A federal prosecutor analyzes the McVeigh guilty verdict and speculates on his punishment.
By Ros Davidson
June 3, 1997
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An expert with the Anti-Defamation League says the American militia groups have been hurt badly by the conviction of Timothy McVeigh.
By Jonathan Broder
June 3, 1997
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Hello, Jean-Marie Le Pen and his neo-fascist friends.
By Mark Hunter
June 2, 1997
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How Microsoft is turning its employees into second-class (and third-class) citizens.
By Paul Rogat Loeb
May 30, 1997
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Reasonable doubt? Probably not.
By Ros Davidson
May 29, 1997
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And you should too, Mr. President -- on a lot of foreign trips. (Or maybe get real sick.)
By Jonathan Broder
May 28, 1997
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But taking from the rich to
give to the poor is exactly what it
sounds like: robbery.
By David Horowitz
May 24, 1997
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Tibetan Buddhism is hot in Hollywood, boffo in advertising, the cause of choice in rock 'n' roll.
By Stephen Prothero
May 24, 1997
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Anti-abortion forces may have lost a battle over the Santorum bill, but they might now be winning the war.
By David Corn
May 23, 1997
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In the Oklahoma City bombing trial, the prosecution did what it had to do.
By Ros Davidson
May 22, 1997
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Who is Laurent Kabila? And will he be better or worse for Africa's third largest country?
By Jonathan Broder
May 21, 1997
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Gangbangs in the Senate, "hideaway offices," $20,000 chairs: Your tax dollars at work.
By Jonathan Broder
May 20, 1997
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400 million strong, Pentecostals -- Holy Rollers, tongue-speakers, "negro ranters" -- have been called "Christianity's Third Force." And after generations in separate wildernesses, Pentecostal churches are returning to their original vision of inclusion across racial and cultural lines -- a vision some critics brand as heretical.
By Dan Ramirez
May 19, 1997
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Will the U.S.-backed push by NATO into central Europe start a new Cold War?
By Jonathan Broder
May 16, 1997
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The Swiss weren't the only ones to covet Nazi war loot. The French government has been equally dishonorable about returning wartime stolen paintings to their rightful owners.
By Andrew Taber
May 15, 1997
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Did we really nosh on each other's body parts -- or are we merely feeding on the dark recesses of fear and imagination?
By Kate Rix
May 14, 1997
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Juvenile crime has dropped, but you wouldn't know from the "blood bath of teen violence" rhetoric used to justify new laws aimed at America's youth.
By Vincent Schiraldi And Mark Kappelhoff
May 13, 1997
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Alfonse D'Amato and the Clinton administration have exposed Switzerland's role in laundering stolen Nazi loot and its intransigence in returning money after World War II. Trouble is, we've known this stuff for 50 years. Why is it suddenly news?
By Jonathan Broder
May 12, 1997
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Progress is being made and money is being spent, but women still need to "make some noise" if they're going to win the war on breast cancer.
By Lori Leibovich
May 9, 1997
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Military justice is starting to resemble the Southern "justice" of yore -- stacked against black men. And it's white feminists who are doing the stacking.
By David Horowitz
May 8, 1997
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A veteran CIA analyst says Iraq did use chemical weapons during the Gulf War, and that the U.S. government knew it but did nothing to protect American GIs.
By Jeff Stein
May 7, 1997
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Anne Matthews paints a
none-too-pretty picture
of life on campus in
"Bright College Years."
By Lori Leibovich
May 6, 1997