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...glorification of the brutality exercised on what he admits to be toothless Iraqi military: "The mission was proof of the last superpower's capacity to halt catastrophe when it summoned the sufficient courage...At no time in history had one ideology and one nation been given such a clear path to influencing the flow of historic events, to halting evil on a historic scale...

Author: By Eric Beach, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Huddled Masses of the 20th Century | 4/16/1999 | See Source »

...said he had followed the same path as the Speaker, moving from emotional support of the death penalty to opposition based on the possibility of a legal error leading to a fatal mistake...

Author: By Robin M. Wasserman, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Polls, Experts Debate Death Penalty | 4/13/1999 | See Source »

...said he had followed the same path as the Speaker, moving from emotional support of the death penalty to opposition based on the possibility of a legal error leading to a fatal mistake...

Author: By Robin M. Wasserman, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Pols, Experts Debate Death Penalty | 4/13/1999 | See Source »

...arrest of David L. Smith, 30, in Eatontown, N.J. Smith had been tracked down in about as many hours as it took Melissa to make it around the world. The fact that a suspected virus writer got caught was unusual enough. Even stranger were the bedfellows who beat a path to his door: a Boston software entrepreneur, a Swedish student, a deputy state attorney general, the nation's largest Internet service provider, a whole passel of antivirus experts and the FBI. What these sleuths found, and where they found it, may become a blueprint for nabbing future digital delinquents...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How They Caught Him | 4/12/1999 | See Source »

...movement is driven less by ideology than by economics. Part of graduate school's allure has always been the promise of a cushy professorial job and the likelihood of tenure within a few years. But today that career path looks grim. Of the 8,000 students receiving Ph.D.s in the humanities between 1996 and 2000, less than half will land full-time "tenure track" jobs. Increasingly, colleges farm out teaching to part-time instructors, who earn skimpy salaries and rarely get benefits. So, many graduate students figure, they need to haggle for all they can get now--and they think...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Look for the Union Grader | 4/12/1999 | See Source »

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