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Mail Call: Making the Top 10.(Letter to the Editor)
September 6, 2004... Our July 26 report on the best-run nations pleased many readers. But, said one, "how can you forget New Zealand?" Another suggested "Switzerland for the top of the list." Some Swedes dismissed their No. 1 spot.
The Fairest of Them All?
...
The Ides of September; French Finance Minister Nicolas Sarkozy heads for an autumn showdown in Paris.
September 6, 2004... Byline: Eric Pape and Tracy McNicoll
Forget the Olympics. A country like France prefers a more dramatic tale, ripe with flawed characters and complex moral questions. From the beaches of Normandy to the Cote d'Azur, French vacationers have...
The Road to Peace; Rebels in the southern Philippines wrestle with the character of their insurgency.
September 6, 2004... Byline: Joe Cochrane
Al-Haj Murad Ebrahim is what you might call an old-school revolutionary. The leader of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front has spent three decades in the jungles of the troubled southern Philippine region of Mindanao,...
Perils of Good Intentions; Roh's idealism has turned South Korea into a debtor state.
September 6, 2004... Byline: B. J. Lee
South Korean president Roh Moo Hyun came to power last year as a populist outsider, and in recent months has spelled out spending plans that deliver on his promises in a big way--some say too big. The total amounts to as...
On The Road.("The Motorcycle Diaries")(Movie Review)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Mac Margolis
Walter Salles has won a deserved reputation for making compassionate films. No matter how blighted their lives, his protagonists--the orphan who finds his lost family in "Central Station," the marked son who flees a...
Emerging From Exile.(South African collections returned in Homecoming Exhibition)(Pretoria Art Museum)
September 6, 2004... At the height of apartheid, in 1972, there weren't many places in South Africa where black artists could freely show their work. When Ike Nkoana hung his paintings in a Pretoria gallery, they were smeared with excrement overnight. So he and...
The Gold Rush.(Rimpa exhibition at National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo)
September 6, 2004... On the right as one enters the gallery hangs Gustav Klimt's "Nuda Veritas" (1899), a monumental picture of a sensual female awash in glorious gold and blue. And on the left: "Wave at Matsushima," a spectacular gold-and-green six- panel screen...
Assimilation Is Hard, Too; The next phase in the life of a plucky Iranian heroine.("Persepolis 2: The Story of a Return")(Book Review)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Yasmine Mohseni
In the first installment of her graphic novel "Persepolis," 35-year-old Marjane Satrapi mined her childhood to produce a vivid and intimate glimpse of life in revolutionary and postrevolutionary Iran. The story,...
Too Close to Call? Maybe.(United States presidential election poll results)(interview with John Zogby president and CEO of Zogby International)(Interview)(Excerpt)
September 6, 2004... One of the most divisive elections in U.S. history is entering its home stretch, and the race is tighter than ever. As John Kerry and President George W. Bush wage war in the battleground states--courting swing voters and the all-important...
For Love of the Dacia.
September 6, 2004... Byline: Andrei Postelnicu (Postelnicu writes for the Financial Times)
They have all the aesthetic appeal of an outhouse on wheels. Many required repair the moment they were made. Yet when the last Dacia, Romania's iconic communist-era...
Novel Land.(Book Reviews)(Birds Without Wings)(Snow)(Book Review)
September 6, 2004... Turkey is a novelist's dream, or perhaps a land dreamed by a novelist. A border country between Europe and the Middle East, it has for centuries been so many things to so many people--Christians, Muslims, Armenians, Greeks and, of course,...
A Hybrid Future; As the age of oil wanes, what will take its place? A little bit of everything.(Brief Article)(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... "Solutions wanted. No idea too weird." If a classified ad could sum up the world's energy problem, this would be it. Experts generally agree that our current reliance on fossil fuels is unsustainable. Already oil is near $50 per barrel, and the...
People Power; The hybrid economy is going to need an electrical grid that can accommodate every available power source.(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Fred Guterl and Andrew Romano (With Kay Itoi in Tokyo and Sudip Mazumdar in New Delhi Graphic text by John Sparks, Graphic by Joshua Keay)
It's not hard to imagine corporate executives treating Terry Penney's ideas with skepticism....
Digging Deep; Even remote patches of oil are starting to look more and more attractive.(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Adam Piore (With Phil Gunson in Caracas and Frank Brown in Moscow)
Its approach echoes across the desolate plains of northern Alberta like the Tyrannosaurus rex that ruled here 265 million years ago. But even a three-story...
The Alaskan Front; Where the battle of greens versus big oil is heating up, once again.(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Brad Stone
In early August this year the remote Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in northern Alaska was gripped with unseasonably mild weather: 20 degree afternoons, ravenous mosquitoes past prime insect season and dry tundra in the...
Oil Isn't Going Away; The real threat is the ever-rising challenge of meeting global demand.(Interview)(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Tony Emerson
Exxon Mobile CEO Lee Raymond is known as an oil man's oil man, with little patience for fuzzy green alternatives. Who better to ask about the semisoft idea behind the hybrid economy--reducing rather than replacing...
The High Road; If China steers its auto industry toward hybrids and perhaps hydrogen cars, the world may have no choice but to follow.(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Craig Simons
Yu Zhuoping hasn't taken a vacation in two years. Nor does the 44-year-old take many weekends off. Instead he logs 12-hour days in a soccer- pitch-size laboratory filled with flashing computer screens and disemboweled...
Seattle Superbus; A northwest oasis is the main testing ground for hybrid mass transit.(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Andrew Romano
Jim Boon is a hybrid kind of guy. He drives a Toyota hybrid to work, a Honda hybrid on weekends, and as a manager for Seattle's public transportation system, he recently placed the world's largest order for hybrid...
The Gas Misers; Toyota's new hybrid may just be the biggest thing in cars since the combustion engine.(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Michael Hastings (With Keith Naughton in Detroit, Masato Kawaguchi in Tokyo and Bureau Reports)
Richard Pearce has turned out his old love, a 1989 Dodge pickup truck. In 2002 the 50-year-old retired soldier and his wife decided to...
Hot Green Gizmos; A range of energy-saving devices for the home.(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Kathryn Williams, Sandy Lawrence Edry, William Underhill, John Sparks
HEATING
Nice Warm Ears
Electric heat is costly, and burning coal is dirty. So why not burn corn? Corn stoves have been around since the '70s, but new...
A Mightier Wind; Wind turbines may soon be ready to compete with conventional power.(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Brad Stone
If Jim Dehlsen ever needs to remind himself why, at 67, he's still trying to save the world, all he has to do is glance outside his window. The offices of his three-year-old firm, Clipper Windpower, look across the...
Solar? Eclipsed. Why does wall street continue to look down on renewable energy?(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Rana Foroohar
If alternative-energy companies are so hot, why are their stocks so unpopular? Record-high oil prices make wind and solar increasingly competitive. Fear of climate change should brighten prospects for any alternative...
The Price Is Wrong; Even $50 a barrel can't wean the world from oil. Only government can.(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Leonardo Maugeri (Maugeri is group senior vice president for corporate strategies at Eni, the Italian oil and gas company.)
Is the internal-combustion engine dead? listening to all the voices calling hybrid vehicles the future of...
Fuel's Future; Business sees clean natural gas as the next dominant fossil fuel. But there will be political storms along the way.(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Christopher Dickey
The moment of maximum danger came suddenly on the evening of January 19.
The scene was the Algerian port of Skikda, where processing plants take natural gas pumped from the Sahara and cool it under enormous...
The Too Slow Flow; Why Indonesia could get all its power from volcanoes--but doesn't.(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Peter Janssen
American giants like ChevronTexaco and Unocal began exploring the vast energy potential trapped in Indonesian volcanoes two decades ago, when Jakarta opened the sector to foreign investors. An archipelago of 17,000...
The Little Weed That Could.(Research on switch grass as an alternative to fossil fuel)(Brief Article)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Michael Hastings
When Americans settled the Western prairies in the 1800s, they came across fields of swaying switch grass four meters high. Since the early 1990s the U.S. Department of Energy has been looking into whether this...
Spinach Power.(Brief Article)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Kathryn Williams
Some scientists won't stop playing with their vegetables. Researchers at MIT think spinach, to be exact, may hold the key to a new, flexible solar panel that could one day be woven into clothes or coat electronic...
Ahoy! Man the Circuit Breakers!(ocean waves could generate cheaper electricity soon)(Brief Article)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Fred Guterl and William Underhill
Ocean waves may seem like a fanciful source of energy. But two new power plants now look certain to shatter that perception. In August a 750-kilowatt power plant off the coast of Scotland began...
Bottomline Decisions; Concerns about reliable supply will always trump the call for cleaner energy.(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Christoph W. Frei (Frei is the associate director for energy industries at the World Economic Forum.)
Securing supply tops the energy-policy agenda. That is the message coming loud and clear from more than 60 energy-industry...
Healthy Homes; New building technologies and innovative add-ons are making nearly-zero-energy houses a real possibility.(Cover Story)
September 6, 2004... Byline: William Underhill and Malcolm Beith (With John Sparks in New York Graphic by Stanford Kay)
Imagine a community for the deeply green. Walls half-a-meter thick keep temperatures comfortable year-round. Windows are triple-glazed. A...
Periscope.
September 6, 2004... Byline: Michael Isikoff, Mark Hosenball, Michael Hirsh, Daniel Klaidman And Dan Ephron, Stryker McGuire, Anna Kuchment and Mark Hosenball, John Sparks and Jennifer Barrett Ozols, Mary Carmichael, Sarah Sennott, William Lee Adams, Devon Thomas...
Snap Judgement: Books.("We the Media," "Frenchy," "Mill, Alm, Money, Lemon: A Family Conversation")(Book Review)
September 6, 2004... Byline: John Ness, Tracy McNicoll, Mac Margolis
We the Media by Dan Gillmor
Complaining about the media is a popular pastime but no one did anything about it, says Gillmor, until Weblogs came along. The California-based columnist...
Tip Sheet.(fashion trends, China's panda tourist attractions)
September 6, 2004... Byline: Kathryn Williams, Craig Simons
Fashion: Poncho Perfection For many the word "poncho" conjures visions of fluorescent orange rain slickers. But you might have noticed that designers these days are doing all they can to change that...
Mail Call: Tune In and Hook On.(Letter to the Editor)
September 20, 2004... Our Aug. 2 cover story on the new iPod music player delighted technophiles and music lovers alike. Gushed one, "My family are hooked on (and to) our iPods." Enthused another, "Bringing it to a party makes me cooler than ambrosia." A third...
Out of Options; After the Beslan tragedy, Vladimir Putin discovers the limits of Stalin Lite.
September 20, 2004... Byline: Frank Brown and Anna Kuchment (With Eve Conant in Washington)
In one of the worst spates of terrorism Russia has ever seen, 425 people are dead--blown up at a Moscow subway station, killed on two passenger jets blown out of the sky...
Mary Poppins Does Vegas; When it comes to gambling, Britain wants the big time.
September 20, 2004... Byline: William Underhill
As a seaside resort, Blackpool looks like a loser. British holidaymakers long ago deserted the chilly northwest coast in favor of dependable Mediterranean sunshine. So what to make of a 1.4 billion pound plan to...
Drifting to the Right; The BJP's leadership crisis has rejuvenated its radicals.
September 20, 2004... Byline: Ron Moreau and Sudip Mazumdar
Uma Bharti, a militant leader of India's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), has always courted controversy. A self-styled sanyasin, or Hindu ascetic, she's been at the forefront of the Hindu nationalist...
Divided We Stand; Germany remains one nation, two peoples.
September 20, 2004... Byline: Stefan Theil
In the east German town of Wittenberge, Chancellor Gerhard Schroder faced eggs and rocks thrown by a furious crowd. In dozens of other cities, tens of thousands of protesters have revived the weekly "Monday marches"...
The Military Factor; Indonesia's next president will face tough decisions about new Army reforms.
September 20, 2004... Byline: Joe Cochrane
Susilo Bambang Yudhoy-Ono still looks like a military man. As he toured the scene of a terrorist bombing last week outside the Australian Embassy in Jakarta, the retired Indonesian Army general and presidential...
Subtle Power Struggle; The shadowboxing between Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao is murky, but could have global implications.
September 20, 2004... Byline: Melinda Liu
On the surface, the article was unremarkable. The China Youth Daily recently reported that the Sichuan town of Wanyuan had laid on a lavish concert to commemorate a 1934 Red Army battle. Wanyuan is too poor to have a...
An Unlikely Champion; Why the anticorporate advocates of free software have come to embrace one of the industry's biggest players.
September 20, 2004... Byline: John Ness
Open-source geeks are devout in their belief that software should be free to all, and hold as their icon the Linux alternative to the Microsoft commercial empire. As unpaid volunteers who collaborate to develop open...
The Rich Hit the Road; Wealthy Koreans no longer feel welcome at home.
September 20, 2004... Byline: B. J. Lee
Lee Hye Yung, 32, is one of the many wealthy South Koreans who now believe their future lies in another country. Her husband's job at a technology company was becoming increasingly insecure. Korea's high-pressure school...
Where the Glass is Full; Beer consumption rises with wealth, but only up to a point, which is why big brewers are running to emerging markets.
September 20, 2004... Byline: William Underhill (With Anna Kuchment in Moscow, John Sparks in New York and Stefan Theil in Berlin)
Vodka. It's as Russian as the Kremlin or the boundless steppes. Except to market watchers who track the fickle movements of public...
Change of Direction; Opportunities for women filmmakers are all too rare in Hollywood. Luckily, there are other options.
September 20, 2004... Byline: Tara Pepper (With Jenny Barchfield in Paris)
When British director Gurinder Chadha started work on "Bend It Like Beckham," she was determined to prove that a film with an Asian star could be a mainstream commercial success. Now...
Finding the Footlights; With government support, Kenya's arts scene comes to life.
September 20, 2004... Byline: Alexandra Polier
Fifty is a bit old to be breaking into a career--especially in Kenya, where the average life expectancy is 43. But playwright John Sibi-Ukumu is doing just that. His new work, "Role Play"--an unapologetic look at...
Winners and Losers; Climate change is shifting the reproductive and migratory patterns of birds and other animals.
September 20, 2004... Byline: Mac Margolis and Clint Witchalls (With Sarah Sennott in London)
One afternoon a couple of months ago, Ali Cuthbert was strolling through the grounds of the Royal Botanic Gardens in London when she heard a racket overhead. She...
Australia in the Crosshairs; National security hasn't been a big issue in the Oz campaign. Will that change?
September 20, 2004... Byline: Melinda Liu And Joe Cochrane (With Melissa Roberts in Sydney)
Will the deadly bombing of the Australian Embassy in Jakarta create a "Madrid effect" in elections Down Under? The Oct. 9 vote is being hotly contested. Incumbent prime...
Korea Marches Out of Sync; The gap between consumption and export growth is at its widest level since the crisis, rendering the economy extremely vulnerable.
September 20, 2004... Byline: Ruchir Sharma (Sharma is co-head of global emerging markets at Morgan Stanley Investment Management.)
South Korea has become a conspicuous oddball in a world where economic conformity is increasingly the norm. While central bankers...
High-Society Girl; Nair's 'Vanity Fair' offers much to savor.(Movie Review)(Brief Article)
September 20, 2004... Byline: David Ansen
She's no mere social climber," a character observes of Becky Sharp in Mira Nair's sumptuous condensation of "Vanity Fair." "She's a mountaineer." Scheming, beautiful, seductive and utterly self-serving, Becky--played...
Co-opting Kabbalah; Israelis prepare for the arrival of the red-string brigade.
September 20, 2004... Byline: Dan Ephron (With Joanna Chen in Tel Aviv)
Avraham Ravitz won't try to block her visit or picket her hotel room. But the 70-year-old rabbi isn't exactly happy that pop star Madonna--er, Esther--plans to be in Israel this week for a...
Anwar Ibrahim ready to resume reform agenda.(Interview)
September 20, 2004... Byline: Lorien Holland
After nearly six years in prison, Anwar Ibrahim was unexpectedly released on Sept. 2. The former deputy prime minister of Malaysia and longtime proponent of reform in the Islamic world immediately flew to Munich,...
Il Cavaliere Goes on Holiday.(Silvio Berlusconi)
September 20, 2004... Byline: Mauro Suttora
Yes, under his leadership Italy's public debt has soared to 1.5 trillion euros, the third largest in the world. Yes, he controls six TV channels, monopolizing 90 percent of Italian television. And no, he hasn't solved...
Perspectives.
September 20, 2004... Byline: Quotation sources from top to bottom: New York Times (2), Los Angeles Times, BBC Online, Sydney Morning Herald, Daily Telegraph
"Who is guilty?"
Text on the front page of Russian newspaper Vechernaya Moskva, referring to the...
Periscope.
September 20, 2004... Byline: Fred Guterl, Eve Conant and B. J. Lee, Owen Matthews and Sami Kohen, Michael Hirsh, Richard Wolffe and Tom Masland, Hideko Takayama,
John Sparks, Johnnie L. Roberts, Emily Flynn, Jonathan Adams, William Lee Adams, Kathryn Williams,...
What You Don't Know About Fat; Fat Cells: The average person has 40 billion of them. They multiply, they're almost impossible to kill and they're sending messages to your body that can ruin your health.(Cover Story)
September 20, 2004... Byline: Anne Underwood and Jerry Adler (Graphic by Anne Underwood, Kevin Hand and Josh Ulick)
It was one of the biggest medical stories of the 1990s and, consequently, one of the biggest disappointments. In 1994, researchers at Rockefeller...
Tip Sheet.
September 20, 2004... Byline: Gianne Brownell with Katka Krosnar in Prague, Tracy McNicoll in Paris, Edward Pentin in Rome and Nadezhda Titova in Moscow, Claudia Kalb
Food: The Thrill Of The Hunt
It's mushroom season in Europe, and time for fungi fanatics...
Mail Call.(Letter to the Editor)
September 27, 2004... Colombia's President
Our Aug. 9 story on Alvaro Uribe, based on a controversial Pentagon report, led readers to the Colombian president's defense. Cried one, "NEWSWEEK, you were had!" Said another, "Uribe is winning the drug war."
...
Birth Dearth; Remember the population bomb? The new threat to the planet is not too many people but too few. How the new demography will shape the coming century.(Cover Story)
September 27, 2004... Byline: Michael Meyer (With Stefan Theil in Berlin, Eric Pape and Tracy McNicoll in Paris, Kay Itoi in Tokyo, Sarah Schafer in Beijing, Owen Matthews in Istanbul and bureau reports)
Everyone knows there are too many people in the world....
America Closes Its Doors; Washington says it is fixing the post-9/11 visa mess, yet complaints from businesses and universities mount.
September 27, 2004... Byline: Rana Foroohar (With Paul Mooney in Beijing, Katka Krosnar in Prague, Anna Kuchment in Moscow, Stefan Theil in Berlin and Emily Flynn in London)
It's a tale that's all too familiar in business circles. Back in June, Liu Yongxing,...
Britain's Big Tent; The real 'new Europe' is an arc of countries that share a very English approach to the region.
September 27, 2004... Byline: Stryker McGuire (With Peter Snowden and Marie Valla in London)
In a construction-clogged corner of Brussels, the sterile towers of the European Union rise above Schuman Circle. As they should. Robert Schuman was among the French...
The Holdouts: Neither Old Nor New; Switzerland and Norway have stubbornly resisted joining the EU, and so far they haven't suffered any great consequences.
September 27, 2004... Byline: William Underhill
Lukas Engelberger's favorite cause looks like a loser. For 12 years the Basel lawyer has campaigned for Swiss membership in the European Union. Yet in 2001 a thumping 76 percent of his countymen voted against it,...
Back Slaps and Business; U.S.-style lobbying is catching on in Mexico's Congress.
September 27, 2004... Byline: Joseph Contreras and Alan Cordova
When the Mexican congress is in session, Gustavo Almaraz Montano and his colleagues spend many hours roaming the corridors of the imposing Legislative Palace in downtown Mexico City. Almaraz spent...
Kim Puts On a Festival; Toto, I have a feeling we're not in Cannes anymore.
September 27, 2004... Byline: Ron Gluckman
Pyongyang is a festival like no other," began British documentary-maker Daniel Gordon. The audience could hardly disagree--and not just because they were in North Korea, where dissenters get thrown in prison. Hardly...
A Change Of Address; The outsourcing industry is moving to cheaper locales.
September 27, 2004... Byline: Ron Moreau and Sudip Mazumdar
India's robust outsourcing industry grew up in the country's major cities--New Delhi, Mumbai and Bangalore, to name three. Prominent information-technology firms like Wipro, TCS and Infosys set up shop...
A Flowering Basketcase; From failed state to model reformer in just a few years, can it be Colombia?
September 27, 2004... Byline: Malcolm Beith (With Mark Duffy in Bogota)
When one thinks of welcoming investment climates, Colombia doesn't usually spring to mind. To foreigners, the country is more famous for its guerrilla warfare, kidnappings, drug production...
Theater: A Spoonful of Sugar; Two big-name musicals--and a handful of smaller shows--arrive to nurse the West End back to health.
September 27, 2004... Byline: Tara Pepper
At first glance it seems the big new shows hitting London's West End stages this autumn couldn't be more different. "The Woman in White," Andrew Lloyd Webber's new musical, is set in an adult web of intrigue, marriage,...
Bad Time to Be Born; Gloom is driving down birthrates among the Asian tigers.(Cover Story)
September 27, 2004... Byline: George Wehfritz (With Sonia Kolesnikov-Jessop in Singapore and B. J. Lee in Seoul)
Pessimism is a potent contraceptive. How else to explain the recent sharp drop in fertility among Asia's newly industrial tigers? Birthrates that...
Review: Better Than Sex; The dizzying new 'Woman in White' bears plenty of Lloyd Webber touches. Will it become the next 'Phantom?'.(Theater Review)
September 27, 2004... Byline: Carla Power
Sisterly love doesn't get much press. Sex and romance have all the good songs and big plots; loyal siblings tend to be relegated to B sides and back stories. But sisterhood is at the center of Andrew Lloyd Webber's...
The Shrinking Cities; What Used to be a Regional Problem is Sweeping the World.(Cover Story)
September 27, 2004... Byline: Stefan Theil
In 1960s America there was "white flight" to the suburbs. In the '70s and '80s the death of heavy industry emptied once proud cities like Manchester and Glasgow. Social and economic change has been wreaking havoc with...
Geoffrey Miller; Questions of Intelligence.(Interview)
September 27, 2004... Byline: Babak Dehghanpisheh
Since news of the prisoner-abuse scandal at Baghdad's Abu Ghraib Prison broke earlier this year, the U.S. military claims to have implemented serious changes at the facility. Registration procedures have been...
Hotel Headaches.(New York hotels)
September 27, 2004... Byline: Yasmine Mohseni
I thought I'd impress my date by suggesting we meet for a drink at the Hudson, one of Ian Schrager's hippest hotels. Or at least it was this spring, a New York eon ago. After sitting for 20 minutes amid the Philippe...
A Warming Current; New leaders improve Singapore-Malaysia relations.
September 27, 2004... Byline: Lorien Holland and Sonia Kolesnikov-Jessop
The billboard had irked Singaporeans for years. Standing beside the train station at the heart of their glass-and-steel city, it boldly read WELCOME TO MALAYSIA--a reminder that, as a...
Seeing Red; Spreading democracy is a Bush theme. Back in Russia, guess who's defending democracy? The communists.
September 27, 2004... Byline: Michael Hirsh and Frank Brown
Back in the United States, George W. Bush was delivering thumping speeches to ecstatic crowds about how "the world is becoming more free" thanks to his administration's policies. But in central Moscow...
Perspectives.(quotations)(Brief Article)
September 27, 2004... Byline: Quotation Sources, Top to Bottom: AP, AFP, Reuters, GRANMA, AAP, ANI
"From our point of view and the U.N. Charter point of view, it was illegal."
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, on the legality of the war in Iraq
...
Periscope.
September 27, 2004... Byline: Peter Hudson and Phil Gunson, Eric Pape, Alberto Letona and Mike Elkin, John Sparks, Eric Unmacht, Mark Hosenball, Rana Foroohar, Andreas Tzortzis, Kathryn Williams, Brad Stone, Sean Smith, Nicki Gostin
CENTRAL BANKS
Meddling...
Tip Sheet.
September 27, 2004... Byline: Emily Flynn, Tara Weingarten, Rana Foroohar, Kathryn Williams, Marie Valla, Sandy Lawrence Edry, Brad Stone
Business Travel
Just Roll Out Of Bed
By Emily Flynn
Business trips used to mean flying business class, staying...