Vol. 134 No. 8, January 2002
Index
- Graph exercise: black teens face tougher Juvenile justice than whites.
- Quiz 1.
- Quiz 2.
- Battling bioterrorism.
- Fight the power of ecstasy.
- Online survey.
- Profiling Arab-Americans.
- Studying homer.
- Understanding the war.
- Wanted: wartime censors.
- Born with AIDS and hope.
- Save the world, get an "A".
- Still a little fight left.
- Hot rod relay.
- Penny pain.
- Smoking out sports.
- This is "it".
- Youth crime ... adult time: as more states make it easier to lock up teenagers in adult prisons, what's become of juvenile justice?
- Girls done wrong: the number of girls arrested is on the rise, but is the system meeting their needs?
- Grandmaster Powell: before September 11, he seemed all but invisible, losing policy disputes to others in the Bush administration. What a difference a war makes.
- Emroz Khan is having a bad day: which is not unusual, and helps explain why Pakistan's youth are tinder for Islamic extremism.
- Laughing when it hurts: Saturday Night Live anchor Tina Fey struggles wire making comedy out of tragedy.
- Dollars 4 downloads: the post-Napster era of paying for digital music has finally arrived. Was it worth the wait?
- Presumed guilty: nine black teens known as the Scottsboro Boys faced bias and death in the 1930s justice system.
- Should teens be tried as adults? Most states have made it easier to try teens as adults, but is it fair to hold them to adult standards?