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Articles from New York Times Upfront (September 7, 2009)

1-24 out of 24 article(s)
Title Author Type Words
$0.0005. 26
14. Brief article 44
2.3 billion. 20
3 billion. Brief article 26
60%. 16
America & the draft: a 200-year debate: the U.S. has gone back and forth between a volunteer military and conscription. Could the draft be brought back today? Davey, Monica 2604
An Indian farmer. Brief article 91
Back to the tap? How the environmental impact of bottled water is getting people to give up their plastic. Cotroneo, Nicole 857
Brain vs. hard drive. Brief article 190
Cartoons. Cartoon 120
China' next generation: Jiao Yuqiao, 15 and Chen Qiong, 17, could soon see China overtake the U.S. as the world's biggest economy. What does that mean for both nations? Wines, Michael Chronology 2090
Climate change culprits? Brief article 134
Could you pass the new citizenship test? An attempt to 'summarize the basic concepts of American democracy' in 100 questions. Semple, Kirk 1247
Decisions, decisions: this fall, the Supreme Court will hear cases that could have a major impact on American life. Here's a look at key constitutional issues they're likely to consider. Liptak, Adam 2702
Does surgery belong online? Brief article 164
How I made it to city hall: Justin Nickels, 22, on being one of America's youngest mayors. Nickels, Justin 545
Junk-food justice. Brief article 147
Mission impossible? Few presidents have faced the daunting challenges confronting Barack Obama when he took office, a first-term report card, and a look ahead. Sanger, David E. Cover story 1951
Should assault weapons be banned? A 10-year ban was allowed to expire in 2004 President Obama wants Congress to pass a new one. Carter, Jimmy; Boren, Dan 539
The babysitter's dilemma. Cohen, Randy 482
The perils of Wikipedia. Brief article 129
Warning! Climate change debate in progress! Granlund, Dave Cartoon 73
White House mail call. Brief article 162
You're under arrest (and so is your DNA): the government is collecting DNA from people who've been arrested, but are still legally innocent. Does that violate their privacy--and the fourth amendment? Moore, Solomon 813

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