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Articles from National Review (July 18, 2005)

1-56 out of 56 article(s)
Title Author Type Words
"For 60 years, my country, the United States, pursued stability at the expense of democracy in this region ... and we achieved neither. Brief Article 183
"Some may believe that my remarks crossed the line," said Richard Durbin, the second-ranking Democratic leader in the Senate. Brief Article 170
A race-based state: Hawaii wants a segregation that would boggle your mind. Ponnuru, Ramesh 1278
According to reports, Oprah Winfrey was denied entry to Hermes in Paris because, as one employee said, they had been "having a problem with North Africans". Brief Article 56
At the east end of Long Island stand the Hamptons, once sleepy farming and fishing hamlets, now prime real estate, containing the summer homes and playgrounds of the super-rich. Brief Article 212
Congress is about to miss a deadline. Brief Article 141
Correction. Correction Notice 30
Democrats want a commission to investigate Guantanamo Bay in the manner of the 9/11 commission. Brief Article 120
During the controversy over Terri Schiavo, we argued that it was wrong deliberately to bring about the death of an innocent human being, whatever her condition. Brief Article 213
Easy riders. Stuttaford, Andrew 1331
Economy-class syndrome. Fisher, Gary T. Letter to the Editor 127
Edward Klein's The Truth About Hillary is so Nineties. Brief Article 165
Friedman night. Buckley, William F., Jr. 556
From on high. Goldberg, Jonah 419
George W. Bush is the first president to visit a nuclear-power plant since Three Mile Island, way back in 1979. Brief Article 24
Gotta be the shoes. Brookhiser, Richard 984
He has prostate cancer and Parkinson's disease, a broken hip and pelvic bone. Brief Article 172
Home, Sweet Home. von Dreele, W.H. Poem 57
Hot enough for you? The state of the global-warming debate, and politicking. Taylor, Jerry 1378
If, following standard tourist guides, you wander through Toronto's homosexual district, at the corner of Alexander and Church streets you will find a statue of one Alexander Wood (1772-1844). Brief Article 154
John Bolton has been twisting in the wind for weeks now, but the case against his nomination has been getting weaker all the while. Brief Article 188
Karl Rove, receiving an award from the Conservative party of New York, surveyed the differences between conservatives and liberals. Brief Article 187
Keeping an orderly foundation. Brief Article 57
KO by Michael. Buckley, William F., Jr. 678
Love story? Carlson, Allan Book Review 1535
Mitt 'n' marriage. Goulding, Jonathan Letter to the Editor 428
Mr. Smith went to Washington and he was something different at the FEC. York, Byron Interview 1458
Newspapers report that the Clintons have paid all of their legal bills. Brief Article 21
Nick Cannon is a rapper who has released a track called "Can I Live?" in which he thanks his mother for not aborting him. Brief Article 110
Notes & asides. 2039
One church, after all. Potemra, Michael Book Review 1600
Ortega, again: the Left's dear comandante comes back in Nicaragua. Reich, Otto J. 1465
Orwell in The Tropics: the nightmare of Cuban refugees continues in the Bahamas. Nordlinger, Jay 1758
Politically correct. Huber, Jim Cartoon 59
Riding through Checkpoint Charlie on a U.S. Army bus during the Cold War was an eerily formal experience. Brief Article 163
Righteous protests: when the Vietnamese prime minister came to the United States, he heard from Vietnamese Americans. Friedman, Rachel Zabarkes 1488
Some Time Later. von Dreele, W.H. Poem 49
Still the one. Hart, Jeffrey Book Review 1072
Sugar daddies: how sugar interests rip off America and harm the national interest. Steorts, Jason Lee Cover Story 2502
Summer arrived, and with it the Gay Pride parade in Gotham. Brief Article 105
The bad decision that started it all: Griswold at 40. Tubbs, David L. 1796
The board of the Berkeley (Calif.) Unified School District voted, 3-2, to retain the name of Jefferson Elementary School, after a two-year campaign to yank the third president because he was a slaveowner. Brief Article 106
The Circle Dance. Epstein, Daniel Mark Poem 98
The dress of thought. Derbyshire, John Book Review 1105
The Fifth Amendment to the Constitution says that the government may take your property "for public use" so long as it provides "just compensation". Brief Article 211
The Iraqi Baathists are hoping to return to power by provoking civil war. Brief Article 250
The Islamic Republic of Holland: how one nation deals with a revolutionary problem. O'Sullivan, John 2007
The long view. Long, Rob 899
The majority of Iranians long ago lost confidence in their rulers. Brief Article 236
The mounting protests. Buckley, William F., Jr. 756
There was a certain bitter amusement in Vietnamese prime minister Phan Van Khai's call on President Bush at the White House: amusement, from seeing Communists grovel for a slice of the wealth they affect to despise; bitter, because they have enjoyed 30 years of unchecked power. Brief Article 141
Trying Again. 437
Wal-Mart is American liberalism's favorite corporate punching bag, and the pugilists of the day are Sens. Ted Kennedy and Jon Corzine and Rep. Anthony D. Weiner. Brief Article 186
What to do with the site in lower Manhattan where the World Trade Center stood? 205
Whether developing ballistic missiles, threatening Taiwan with truculent language, shrugging at North Korea's nuclear ambitions, or permitting the piracy of intellectual property, China's rulers do little to inspire confidence in their goodwill. Brief Article 189
Winning in Iraq. 928

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