Vol. 30 No. 10, December - December 2004
Index
- Corrections.
- Credit goes to wrong representative in Florida.
- Help for press secretaries.
- It's Rutgers', not Rutger's.
- Homeland security: who gets what and how.
- People & politics.
- Hawaii says no to pain.
- More Hispanics call rural America home.
- All for one one for all.
- Enough's enough.
- Fishy warnings.
- Help! I'm here.
- Plunge of the property tax.
- Real or fake?
- RX alternatives.
- The animals tell.
- A beef bounty.
- Give us a break.
- Proving purity.
- Teak surfing time bomb.
- Who's in there?
- Perpetual parity: just when it looked like state legislatures couldn't get any closer they did.
- The people's choice: from stem cell research to electoral college reform, citizens have their say.
- Terminating toughman competitions: sometimes you wonder how low we can go. The barbaric and bloodthirsty game called "toughman" is now banned or regulated in 24 states.
- Schwarzenegger blinked: California's movie star governor has taken a bipartisan tack that has surprised both parties.
- Downsizing helps delinquents; Missouri has discovered that showering troubled teens with warmth, respect and concern works well in turning them around.
- North Carolina's predatory mortgage lending law: 1999 N.C. Sess. Laws Chap. 332.
- Border studies: heightened security procedures don't stop Mexican students who want American college degrees.
- A Tex-Mex exchange: making it easier for cross-cultural exchanges between U.S. and Mexican students is the goal of some legislators.
- Communicate an effective message: giving a speech can be a trying experience, even for seasoned pros. Here's some advice on how to make your speeches effective and memorable.
- As they see it.