Vol. 35 No. 1, January - January 2003
Index
- Cell mates.
- Low grade.
- No good deed.
- War party?
- Correction.
- Tilting at windmills: Rummy's doomed reform Saddam the sissy Woodward the protector Broadway's bad review the Jameson's of toxic waste.
- Vice grip: Dick Cheney is a man of principles. Disastrous principles.
- License to kill: how the GOP helped John Allen Muhammad get a sniper rifle.
- Hollywood and whine: why are democrats helping the entertainment industry stamp out new technologies that fuel economic growth?
- Remote controlled.
- Deep in the heart of darkness: under George W. Bush, the worse of two Texas traditions is shaping America.
- Reagan's liberal legacy: what the new literature on the Gipper won't tell you.
- CNN "Inside Politics" host Judy Woodruff, whose reporting was among the snippiest ("Kerry is already in denial mode"), spends $80 on her golden locks at the Four Seasons Spa Salon on Pennsylvania Ave.
- Cyber-agitator Matt Drudge set off a minor media frenzy when he reported, incorrectly, that presidential aspirant Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) regularly paid Christophe salon stylist Isabelle Goetz $150 to cut his hair.
- Kerry is only one of the well-known salons famous customers--Goetz styles Hillary Clinton's stately mane for $150.
- Most male reporters, it turns out, take a more frugal approach to hair care.
- As for the Texas tresses of President George W. Bush, he pays $30 a cut to Washington stylist Zahira Zahir, who also trimmed the locks of George H.W. Bush and Ronald Reagan.
- Between being investigated for fraud by U.S. attorneys in New York, and being sued by shareholders seeking millions in lost investment dollars, it's been a bad couple of months for U.S. Technologies CEO Gregory Earls.
- Few reporters have noted what is perhaps the most lasting legacy of Sen. Strom Thurmond (D-S.C.), now retired: the unusually large number of family members, former aides, and even neighbors he's managed to appoint to federal judicial offices during the past two decades.
- Blue light special.
- Chewing over trade policy.
- Fashion sweatshop.
- Political poker.
- Saddam spammed.
- Hot flash, cold cash: how a once-respected women's group went through the change--with the help of drug industry money.
- The Washington monthly's Monthly Journalism Award.
- All things considerate: how NPR makes Tavis Smiley sound like Linda Wertheimer.
- Tax and fend: Bush's assault on tax fairness is part of an old Republican tradition--but not the only one.
- Mensch at work: the dilemma of Joe Lieberman.
- Off target: the biggest challenge to the NRA may not come from trial lawyers, but from demographics.
- Long good buy.
- Appointment with destiny.
- At home abroad.
- Grave concerns.
- Hire education.
- World wide wash.
- Empire state building.
- Geek tragedy.