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...contrary this was not “an obvious point” or focus of the forum discussion. Specifically, the forum was not a venue created to indict U.S. foreign policy initiatives; rather it was a student-organized roundtable discussion on how Harvard University, through its existing mission of promoting world-class research and sustained teaching excellence, can help alleviate the current public health crisis in Africa. Lack of existing primary health care infrastructure, continued political instability and cultural-religious stigmas against Western interventions are just a subset of the problems that have historically impeded many well intended international relief...

Author: By Jeffrey M. Blander, | Title: Attack on Summers' Remarks Prove Off-Base | 12/1/2003 | See Source »

Right-wing columnists like Charles Krauthammer [ESSAY, Sept. 22] have two essential responses to critics of President Bush's policies: 1) You're unpatriotic; 2) you're mad. In his commentary, Krauthammer doesn't indict me on the first count, but he does lump me in with a crowd of Democrats he describes as "seized with a loathing for President Bush--a contempt and disdain giving way to a hatred that is near pathological." However, what I feel as the result of President Bush's policies is sadness. I'm not mad at his "revolutionizing American foreign policy" or that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Oct. 13, 2003 | 10/13/2003 | See Source »

...More in Sadness than Anger Right-wing columnists like Charles Krauthammer [Sept. 22] have two essential responses to critics of President George W. Bush's policies: 1) you're unpatriotic; 2) you're mad. In his commentary, Krauthammer doesn't indict me on the first count, but he does lump me in with a crowd of Democrats he describes as "seized with a loathing for President Bush?a contempt and disdain giving way to a hatred that is near pathological." However, what I feel as the result of President Bush's policies is sadness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters | 10/13/2003 | See Source »

That was one recession and a few corporate scandals ago. Now, faster than you can say Ken Lay--and, more to the point, faster than the feds can indict him--prime time is again daring to suggest that there are classes in America. There are sitcoms with working-class leads and teen soaps and reality shows with prince-and-pauper themes. Above all, there are wealthy folks cheating and stealing and being humiliated--no fewer than three new series have characters who are in hot water with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). And they said Martha Stewart's influence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: The New Class Action | 9/29/2003 | See Source »

...back [to detention]," he told an astonished Schneider. In addition to helping Saddam hide a fortune that U.S. investigators think could be anything from $2 billion to $7 billion or more, Barzan served from 1979 to 1983 as head of Iraqi intelligence, an organization notorious for its brutish tactics. Indict, a British human rights group, claims it can produce up to 30 witnesses to support various allegations against Barzan. Among them: he helped direct the murder of thousands of rebellious Iraqi Kurds in 1983, and he personally visited beatings, electroshock and executions on Iraqi prisoners...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The IRS Takes On Saddam's Kin | 7/7/2003 | See Source »

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