NYTimes masthead

This web page is dedicated to my Dad, Tsien-Chung Chou (1902-2000),
who read avidly The New York Times daily & joyfully for over 50 years.

Selected Articles from The New York Times
(* denotes news of special interest)

Saturday, March 31, 2001:
On This Day: March 31 (René Descartes 3/31/1596-2/11/1650, Franz Joseph Haydn 3/31/1732-5/31/1809, Edward Fitzgerald 3/31/1809-6/14/1883, James M. Cox 3/31/1870-7/15/1957, Arthur Griffith 3/31/1872-8/12/1922, Srge Diaghilev 3/31/1872-8/19/1929, Jack Johnson 3/31/1878-6/10/1946, Sir Lawrence Bragg 3/31/1890-7/1/1971, John McCloy 3/31/1895-3/11/1989, Octavio Paz 3/31/1914-4/19/1998, William Daniels 1927, Gordie Howe 1928, Shirley Jones 1934, Herb Alpert 1935, Richard Chamberlain 1935, Patrick Leahy 1940, Gabe Kaplan 1945, Al Gore 1948, Rhea Perlman 1948, Ed Marinaro 1950)
President Johnson Says He Won't Run for Another Term (By Tom Wicker, March 31, 1968)
Cesar Chavez, 66, Organizer of Union For Migrants, Dies
[3/31/1927-4/23/1993] (By ROBERT LINDSEY, April 24, 1993)
John Lewis, Pianist, Composer and Creator of the Modern Jazz Quartet, Dies at 80
(By PETER KEEPNEWS, Mar. 31, 2001)
Blacks Split on Disclosing Multiracial Roots (By ERIC SCHMITT, Mar. 31, 2001)
Energy Crisis Dims Small-Business Hopes (By EVELYN NIEVES, Mar. 31, 2001)
Butchers' Passover Lament: Yes, We Have No Brisket (By DAVID FIRESTONE, Mar. 31, 2001)
Santa Fe Journal: Uproar Over Virgin Mary in a Two-Piece Swimsuit (By MICHAEL JANOFSKY, Mar. 31, 2001)
Pigs Pass First Foot-and-Mouth Test as U.S. Increases Precautions (By ELIZABETH BECKER, Mar. 31, 2001)
News Analysis: The Senate's Moment for Change (By RICHARD L. BERKE, Mar. 31, 2001)
Quick Vote in House Is Seen as Crucial to Finance Bill (By ALISON MITCHELL, Mar. 31, 2001)
* Forced to Divest, Bush Aides Lose Money in a Bear Market (By LESLIE WAYNE, Mar. 31, 2001)
* No. 1 Fan Plays Host to Legends of Baseball (By FRANK BRUNI, Mar. 31, 2001)
Religion Journal: Reading Signposts on Church Unity (By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, Mar. 31, 2001)
Public Lives: A University President Who Learns the Hard Way (By JODI WILGOREN, Mar. 31, 2001)
* The Times To Publish Personal Ads (By COREY KILGANNON, Mar. 31, 2001)
Tracing Anti-Abortion Network to a Slaying Suspect in France (By DAN BARRY, Mar. 31, 2001)
Safety Flaws Found in Stores Selling Meat (By CHRISTOPHER DREW & BUD HAZELKORN, Mar. 31, 2001)
NYC: Coming Home to Kennedy Can Get Ugly (By CLYDE HABERMAN, Mar. 31, 2001)
OP-ED: Free Speech That Threatens My Life (By WARREN M. HERN, Mar. 31, 2001)
So Many Clocks, So Little Time (By ADAM HOCHSCHILD, Mar. 31, 2001)
JOURNAL: The Thrill of It All (By FRANK RICH, Mar. 31, 2001)
ABROAD AT HOME: The Feeling of a Coup (By ANTHONY LEWIS, Mar. 31, 2001)
BUSINESS: Content (NY TIMES, Mar. 31, 2001)
* BUSINESS: A Gloomy Quarter Ends, and Investors Look Ahead
[Dow +80, Nasdaq +20] (By ALEX BERENSON, Mar. 31, 2001)
The Ranks of Job Recruiters Are Thinning Out Rapidly (By KATIE HAFNER, Mar. 31, 2001)
Studies Find Scant Availability of Spectrum for Wireless Internet (By STEPHEN LABATON, Mar. 31, 2001)
An Attempt to Block NorthPoint's Shutdown (NY TIMES, Mar. 31, 2001)
DoubleClick Privacy Lawsuit Dismissed (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Mar. 31, 2001)
ARTS: Content/A> (NY TIMES, Mar. 31, 2001)
ARTS: U.N., in Shift, Moves to Save Art for Afghans (By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Mar. 31, 2001)
BOOKS: IDEAS: 'Treason by the Book': When Treason Was Tolerable and Gossip Death (By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN, Mar. 31, 2001)
BOOKS: Think Tank: As Definitions Change, the Moral Turns Trivial (By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, Mar. 31, 2001)
DANCE: 'Frankie's Wedding': The Adolescent's Poignancy as That Wedding Nears (By JACK ANDERSON, Mar. 31, 2001)
FILM: 'Wojaczek': A Poet Whose Death Wish Eventually Comes True (By A. O. SCOTT, Mar. 31, 2001)
FILM: 'Nine Queens': Well, Who's the Joker Now? (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Mar. 31, 2001)
OPERA: 'Parsifal' at 60: Youthfully Rash, Vocally Rich (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Mar. 31, 2001)
POP: Pet Sounds and Vibrations of Brian Wilson (By ANN POWERS, Mar. 31, 2001)
THEATER: 'Jig Saw': Better a Cutting Word Than a Dull Bushel of Babies (By ANITA GATES, Mar. 31, 2001)
TV: 'Eye for Eye': Fighting Abortion and Taking No Prisoners (By JULIE SALAMON, Mar. 31, 2001)
GARDENING: Cuttings: A Bounty of Tulips Along Park Avenue (By ANNE RAVER, Mar. 31, 2001)
SCIENCE: Hemisphere Conference Ends in Discord on Global Warming (By DOUGLAS JEHL, Mar. 31, 2001)
* Sky Watch: The Northern Lights (By JOE RAO, Mar. 30, 2001)
HEALTH: Stem Cells Yield Promising Results (By NICHOLAS WADE, Mar. 31, 2001)
Anesthesia Drug Is Removed After Deaths of 5 Patients (By DENISE GRADY, Mar. 31, 2001)

Friday, March 30, 2001:
On This Day: March 30 (Moses Maimonides 3/30/1135-12/13/1204, Francisco de Goya 3/30/1746-4/16/1828, Anna Sweell 3/30/1820-4/25/1878, Vincent van Gogh 3/30/1853-7/29/1890, Melanie Klein 3/30/1882-9/22/1960, McGeorge Bundy 3/30/1919-9/16/1996, Richard Helms 1913, Frankie Laine 1913, Richard Dysart 1929, John Astin 1930, Warren Beatty 1937, Eric Clapton 1945, Paul Reiser 1957, MC Hammer 1963, Tracy Chapman 1964, Celine Dion 1968)
Reagan Wounded In Chest By Gunman; Outlook 'Good' After 2-Hour Surgery (By Howell Raines, March 30, 1981)
* Sean O'Casey, Irish Playwright, Is Dead at 84
[3/30/1880-9/18/1964] (NY TIMES, September 19, 1964)
* Helge Ingstad, Discoverer of Viking Site, Dies at 101 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Mar. 30, 2001)
Anthony Steel, Actor, Dies at 80 (NY TIMES, Mar. 30, 2001)
* Birgit Akesson, Creator of Elemental Dance Solos, Dies at 93 [on Her Birthday]
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Mar. 30, 2001)
* California Census Confirms Whites Are in Minority (By TODD S. PURDUM, Mar. 30, 2001)
For the Old Hollywood, Last Suppers at Spago (By BERNARD WEINRAUB, Mar. 30, 2001)
Political Memo: Raising His Megaphone, Bush Says, I'm in Charge (By FRANK BRUNI, Mar. 30, 2001)
After a Marathon Debate, a Moment for Emotions (By ROBIN TONER, Mar. 30, 2001)
Campaign Finance Measure Faces Powerful Opponent in the House (By PHILIP SHENON, Mar. 30, 2001)
Senate Clears Last Hurdle for Bill on Soft-Money Ban (By ALISON MITCHELL, Mar. 30, 2001)
Bay Bridge Lifted in San Francisco (By REUTERS, Mar. 30, 2001)
Bush Hammers Arafat; Takes a Softer Tone With Israel (By JANE PERLEZ, Mar. 30, 2001)
Harbin Journal: Fiery Death Fuels a Son's Campaign Against a City (By ERIK ECKHOLM, Mar. 30, 2001)
That Russian Espionage Tape Was Not Quite All It Seemed (By PATRICK E. TYLER, Mar. 30, 2001)
* Public Lives: On Stage, a Substitute Teacher Fills in 24 Roles (By CHRIS HEDGES, Mar. 30, 2001)
A Religious Searching Leads to the Anti-Abortion Movement (By JOHN KIFNER, Mar. 30, 2001)
EDITORIAL: From Newark Over the North Pole (NY TIMES, Mar. 30, 2001)
OP-ED: The Olympics Can Help Reform (By ZHANG LIANG, Mar. 30, 2001)
OP-ED: Once Again, the City Beckons (By KENNETH T. JACKSON, Mar. 30, 2001)
* OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Code Red (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Mar. 30, 2001)
LETTERS: My G-G-Generation, Right Out of Mad (By ANDREW B. EILLS et. al., Mar. 30, 2001)
BUSINESS: Earnings Trouble Investors in a Mixed Day on Wall St.
[Dow +14, Nasdaq -34] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 30, 2001)
11,500 Jobs Are Being Cut at Big Maker of Auto Parts (By KEITH BRADSHER, Mar. 30, 2001)
* Internet Customers Scramble as Big D.S.L. Network Goes Dark (By SIMON ROMERO, Mar. 30, 2001)
* Business Ups and Downs at Internet Speed (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Mar. 30, 2001)
Advertising: Omnicom to Work More Closely With Troubled Online Agencies (By STUART ELLIOTT, Mar. 30, 2001)
Nazis' Victims to Drop Suit Against I.B.M. (By BARNABY J. FEDER, Mar. 30, 2001)
Investors Flee U.S. Stock Funds (By REUTERS, Mar. 30, 2001)
CYBER LAW JOURNAL: Movie Industry Frowns on Professor's Software Gallery (By DAVID F. GALLAGHER, Mar. 30, 2001)
LIVING: DINING: Diner's Journal: Lutèce (By WILLIAM GRIMES, Mar. 30, 2001)
The Outsider: Meandering Along Old Railroad Trails on a Bike (By JAMES GORMAN, Mar. 30, 2001)
* ART: William Blake: A Visionary Whose Odd Images Still Burn Bright (By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Mar. 30, 2001)
* ART: 'Aluminum by Design': The Soul of Versatility, Searching for Identity (By KEN JOHNSON, Mar. 30, 2001)
ART: 'The School of London and Their Friends': A Catchall School, Devoted to Human Forms
(By GRACE GLUECK, Mar. 30, 2001)
ART: 'Neil Jenney: The Bad Years': And When He Was Bad, He Certainly Was Busy
(By ROBERTA SMITH, Mar. 30, 2001)
Inside Art: The Face of Anguish [Picasso's 'Guernica'] (By CAROL VOGEL, Mar. 30, 2001)
Antiques: Jungle Fever Strikes a Collector (By WENDY MOONAN, Mar. 30, 2001)
BOOKS: 'On Bullfighting': Defeating Death by Writing About It in the Bullring
(By RICHARD EDER, Mar. 30, 2001)
FILM: Watching Movies With Wolfgang Petersen (By RICK LYMAN, Mar. 30, 2001)
FILM: 'The Tailor of Panama': No Wall, No Canal Zone. What's a Spy to Do? (By A. O. SCOTT, Mar. 30, 2001)
FILM: 'Spy Kids': Espionage Is the Family Business, Even in a Fun Factory (By ELVIS MITCHELL, Mar. 30, 2001)
FILM: 'Someone Like You': So Are All Men Dogs or Are They Really Bulls? (By A. O. SCOTT, Mar. 30, 2001)
FILM: 'Amores Perros': Life Is Fast and Shocking for Pulp Fiction Characters (By Elvis Mitchell, Mar. 30, 2001)
FILM: 'Simon Magus': Oy, Crazy, Maybe, but No Fool (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Mar. 30, 2001)
FILM: 'Before the Storm': Parallel Predicaments on a Collision Course (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Mar. 30, 2001)
FILM: 'Keep the River on Your Right: A Modern Cannibal Tale' (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Mar. 30, 2001)
FILM: 'Butterfly' (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Mar. 30, 2001)
FILM: At the Movies: In Like a Lion: Two Hit Films (By RICK LYMAN, Mar. 30, 2001)
FILM: Taking the Children: A Giant Leap and Small Stumbles [Galśspagos]
(NY TIMES, Mar. 30, 2001)
* THEATER: 'Invention of Love': Housman's Hell, Stoppard's Style (By BEN BRANTLEY, Mar. 30, 2001)
THEATER: Family Fare: Superman, Move Over (By Laurel Graeber, Mar. 30, 2001)
THEATER: On Stage and Off: A Milestone and an 'Ouch!' (NY TIMES, Mar. 30, 2001)
TV Weekend: A Strawberry-and-Cream Past, Spiced With Romance (By CARYN JAMES, Mar. 30, 2001)
SCIENCE: Laser Project Hits a Snag; Court Hints At Conflict (By JAMES GLANZ, Mar. 30, 2001)

Thursday, March 29, 2001:
On This Day: March 29 (Santorio Santorio 3/29/1561-2/22/1636, John Tyler 3/29/1790-1/18/1862, Elihu Thomson 3/29/1853-3/13/1937, Howard Lindsay 3/29/1889-2/11/1968, Jozsef Mindszenty 3/29/1892-5/6/1975, Lavrenty Beria 3/29/1899-12/23/1953, Sir William Walton 3/29/1902-3/8/1983, E. Power Biggs 3/29/1906-3/10/1977, Pearl Bailey 3/29/1918-8/17/1990, Samuel Moore Walton 3/29/1918-4/5/1992, Eugene McCarthy 1916, Eileen Heckart 1919, John Major 1943, Vangelis 1943, Kurt Thomas 1956, Christopher Lambert 1957, Elle MacPherson 1963, Lucy Lawless 1968, Jennifer Capriati 1976)
U.S. Forces Out of Vietnam; Hanoi Frees the Last P.O.W. (By Joseph B. Treaster, March 29, 1973)
* Cy Young Is Dead at 88; Famed Pitcher, Record of 511 Victories
[3/29/1867-11/4/1955] (NY TIMES, November 5, 1955)
John Clarke Saunders, Physician and Clinical Pharmacologist, Dies at 82 (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Mar. 29, 2001)
John A. Alonzo, Cinematographer, Dies at 66 (NY TIMES, Mar. 29, 2001)
* Maude Rutherford, High-Kicking Songster of 20's, Dies at 104 (By JOYCE WADLER, Mar. 29, 2001)
John McCarthy, Sponsor of No-Fault Insurance Law, Dies at 77 (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Mar. 29, 2001)
* California Census Confirms Whites Are in Minority (By TODD S. PURDUM, Mar. 29, 2001)
* As Seattle's Economy Slows, Many Like the Change of Pace (By SAM HOWE VERHOVEK, Mar. 29, 2001)
Mormons Intensify Missionary Effort in Utah (By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, Mar. 29, 2001)
U.S. Reviewing Aid Meant to Contain Russia's Arsenal (By JUDITH MILLER, Mar. 29, 2001)
Sharon Orders Air Raids on Arafat's Bases (By DEBORAH SONTAG, Mar. 29, 2001)
A New Theory in Egyptair Crash (NY TIMES, Mar. 29, 2001)
Spring Look: Thin Dresses and Blue Lips (By JANE GROSS, Mar. 29, 2001)
Columbia Graduate Students Seek Right to Organize Union (By KAREN W. ARENSON, Mar. 29, 2001)
Public Lives: Juggling Pregnancy, Jitters, Soap Career and Regis (By ROBIN FINN, Mar. 29, 2001)
EDITORIAL: A Strong Vote Against Soft Money (NY TIMES, Mar. 29, 2001)
OP-ED: Seattle Soldiers On (By DAVID GUTERSON, Mar. 29, 2001)
OP-ED: The Serbs' Choice (By STJEPAN MESIC, Mar. 29, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: You Can Bet on It (By BOB HERBERT, Mar. 29, 2001)
OP-ED ESSAY: The A.D.L. and Rich (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Mar. 29, 2001)
ART CRITIC: You Have to Face Reality. It's on Every Channel. (By JULIE SALAMON, Mar. 29, 2001)
THEATER: 'Mnemonic': Into the Loop of a Daisy Chain of Memories (By BEN BRANTLEY, Mar. 29, 2001)
LIVING: HOME: The Bathroom Primps for Its Public (By ELAINE LOUIE, Mar. 29, 2001)
HOME: The Essence of Sweden, on Park Avenue (By MARIANNE ROHRLICH, Mar. 29, 2001)
Trade Secrets, The Bath: A Designer Dips Into the Big Boxes (By STEVEN SCLAROFF, Mar. 29, 2001)
Personal Shopper: For the Holidays, a Change of Settings (By MARIANNE ROHRLICH, Mar. 29, 2001)
Human Nature: New Hope for Community Gardeners (By ANNE RAVER, Mar. 29, 2001)
GARDENING: Garden Q&A: Gardenias Are to Cry For (By DORA GALITZKI, Mar. 29, 2001)
CIRCUITS: Contents (NY TIMES, Mar. 29, 2001)
Bettors Find Online Gambling Hard to Resist (By MATT RICHTEL, Mar. 29, 2001)
* STATE OF THE ART: A New Face (and Heart) for the Mac (By DAVID POGUE, Mar. 29, 2001)
* A Computer? Funny, You Don't Sound Like One (By IAN AUSTEN, Mar. 29, 2001)
HOW IT WORKS: Global Positioning: Getting There With Help From Above (By MATT LAKE, Mar. 29, 2001)
* A Comeback for Writing, but Not Necessarily for Eloquence (By BONNIE ROTHMAN MORRIS, Mar. 29, 2001)
GAME THEORY: Action for Fans and the Simply Curious (By CHARLES HEROLD, Mar. 29, 2001)
ONLINE SHOPPER: Studying the Mind of the Teenus Horribilis (By MICHELLE SLATALLA, Mar. 29, 2001)
* WHAT'S NEXT: In a Future Generation of Tiny Chips, Silicon May Shine (By ANNE EISENBERG, Mar. 29, 2001)
The Issues: For Internet Wagers, Shifting Legal and Financial Ground (By MATT RICHTEL, Mar. 29, 2001)
Spring Forward, Fall Back (Except on Your VCR) (By  SHELLY FREIERMAN, Mar. 29, 2001)
Internet Appliance Gets a Lube and a Paint Job (By J. D. BIERSDORFER, Mar. 29, 2001)
New Music Player Can Sing, but It's a Rare Bird (By ROY FURCHGOTT, Mar. 29, 2001)
Putting Your John Hancock Onto Scribbled E-Mail Notes (By IAN AUSTEN, Mar. 29, 2001)
Flat-Panel Monitor Takes Up Less Desk and Wallet Space (By MICHEL MARRIOTT, Mar. 29, 2001)
High-Altitude Web Surfing for the Masses (By, Mar. 29, 2001)
SCREEN GRAB: Places Where Jesters Are Taken Seriously (By MICHAEL POLLAK, Mar. 29, 2001)
Q & A: Even Hardware Needs Designated Drivers (NY TIMES, Mar. 29, 2001)
SCIENCE: Test Is Devised for Theory of Elusive Space Ripples (By JAMES GLANZ, Mar. 29, 2001)
Jupiter Radiation Levels Raise Concern for Future Probes (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 29, 2001)

Wednesday, March 28, 2001:
On This Day: March 28 (William Byrd 3/28/1674-8/26/1744, Henry Rowe Schoolcraft 3/28/1793-12/10/1864, St. John Neumann 3/28/1811-1/5/1860, Wade Hampton 3/28/1818-4/11/1902, Aristide Briand 3/28/1862-3/7/1932, Paul Whiteman 3/28/1890-12/29/1967, Rudolf Serkin 3/28/1903-5/8/1991, Onoe Shoroku II 3/28/1913-6/25/1989, Freddie Bartholomew 3/28/1924-1/23/1992, Zbigniew Brzezinski 1928, Charlie McCoy 1941, Mike Newell 1942, Ken Howard 1944, Reba McEntire 1955, Julia Stiles 1981)
Radiation Is Released in Accident at Three Mile Island Nuclear Plant in Pennsylvania (By Donald Janson, March 28, 1979)
August A. Busch Jr. Dies at 90; Built Largest Brewing Company
[3/28/1899-9/29/1989] (By ROBERT McG. THOMAS Jr., September 30, 1989)
BUSINESS: Positive Consumer Confidence Report Gives Shares a Lift
[Dow +260, Nasdaq +54] (By MICHAEL BRICK, Mar. 28, 2001)
Buffett Says Stocks Are Still Too Costly (NY TIMES, Mar. 28, 2001)
* Market Place: An Analyst Skeptical on Amazon.com Moves On (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Mar. 28, 2001)
Lucent Confronts Diminishing Expectations in Effort to Raise Cash (By SIMON ROMERO & RIVA D. ATLAS, Mar. 28, 2001)
Disney Shares Slide After Announcing Job Cuts (By BILL CARTER, Mar. 28, 2001)

Tuesday, March 27, 2001:
On This Day: March 27 (Andrew Bell 3/27/1753-1/27/1832, Alfred-Victor Vigny 3/27/1797-9/17/1863, Otto Wallach 3/27/1847-2/26/1931, Sir Henry Royce 3/27/1863-4/22/1933, Patty Smith Hill 3/27/1868-5/25/1946, Edward Steichen 3/27/1879-3/25/1973, Sata Eisaku 3/27/1901-6/3/1975, Pee Wee Russell 3/27/1906-2/15/1969, Denton Welch 3/27/1915-12/30/1948, Sarah Vaughan 3/27/1924-4/3/1990, Lord Callaghan 1912, Cyrus R. Vance 1917, Anthony Lewis 1927, Arthur Mitchell 1934, Julian Glover 1935, Michael York 1942, Tony Banks 1950, Maria Schneider 1952, Quentin Tarantino 1963, Mariah Carey 1970)
Khrushchev Takes Full Control, Replacing Bulganin as Premier (By Max Frankel, March 27, 1958)
* Mies van der Rohe Dies at 83; Leader of Modern Architecture
[3/27/1886-8/17/1969] (NY TIMES, August 19, 1969)
Toby Wing, Pinup Star of the 1930's, Dies at 85 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Mar. 27, 2001)
Mischa Richter, a New Yorker Regular, Dies at 90 (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Mar. 27, 2001)
Janice Levin, Philanthropist of the Arts, Dies at 87 (By ENID NEMY, Mar. 27, 2001)
Francis Yohannan, 'Catch-22' Inspiration, Dies at 79 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 27, 2001)
Alan Green, Ambassador to Romania, Dies at 75 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 27, 2001)
Electric Rate Increase Sought for California (By TODD S. PURDUM, Mar. 27, 2001)
Bush Takes Tax-Cut Drive Back on the Road (By FRANK BRUNI, Mar. 27, 2001)
Congress Begins Planning for Increased Number of Uninsured as Economy Slows (By ADAM CLYMER & ROBERT PEAR, Mar. 27, 2001)
Political Memo: G.O.P. Billionaire Haunts a Democratic Race [Michael R. Bloomberg]
(By ADAM NAGOURNEY, Mar. 27, 2001)
Thousands of Pupils Start Saturday Classes in English, Math and Science (By ANEMONA HARTOCOLLIS, Mar. 27, 2001)
Public Lives: From a Courtroom on Camera, Justice With Style (By LYNDA RICHARDSON, Mar. 27, 2001)
OP-ED: Asking for Forgiveness— At What Price? (By JONATHAN D. SPENCE, Mar. 27, 2001)
OP-ED: A Strange Waltz in Vienna (By STANLEY B. GREENBERG, Mar. 27, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Bush's First Memo (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Mar. 27, 2001)
BUSINESS: Blue-Chip Shares Gain Ground While Technology Slips
[Dow +183, Nasdaq -10] (By REUTERS, Mar. 27, 2001)
* Baseball Fans to Be Charged for Internet Broadcasts (By CHRIS GAITHER, Mar. 27, 2001)
Procter & Gamble Suit Over Satan Rumor Resurrected (By GEANNE ROSENBERG, Mar. 27, 2001)
Two Chip Makers Announce Layoffs [Conexant Systems & PMC-Sierra] (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Mar. 27, 2001)
The Week in Science: The Flat-Faced Guy From Kenya (By NICHOLAS WADE, Mar. 27, 2001)
SCIENCE: In an Ancient Wreck, Clues to Seafaring Lives (By WILLIAM J. BROAD, Mar. 27, 2001)
* Computing, One Atom at a Time (By GEORGE JOHNSON, Mar. 27, 2001)
The Toppled Chimney Mystery: Is It the Fault's Fault? (By CAROL KAESUK YOON, Mar. 27, 2001)
* Of Nanotubes and Buckyballs: Atomic-Scale Building Blocks (By KENNETH CHANG, Mar. 27, 2001)
Lake's Rapid Retreat Heightens Troubles in North Africa (By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Mar. 27, 2001)
CONVERSATION WITH / Elliot Aronson: No One Left to Hate: Averting Columbines
(By SUSAN GILBERT, Mar. 27, 2001)
* OBSERVATORY: Amoeba Buddy System (By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Mar. 27, 2001)
* OBSERVATORY: Reproducing, Gingerly (By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Mar. 27, 2001)
* OBSERVATORY: Butter, to Gauge Pollution (By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Mar. 27, 2001)
DOCTOR'S WORLD: Cardiologists See Cheney as a Useful Case Study (By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, M.D., Mar. 27, 2001)
Examining, and Easing, the Anxiety of Authorship (By ELIZABETH STONE, Mar. 27, 2001)
PERSONAL HEALTH: Human Body Recall! Design Problems (By JANE E. BRODY, Mar. 27, 2001)
BOOKS ON HEALTH: Harsh Words for Those Who Defy 'Do No Harm' (By JOHN LANGONE, Mar. 27, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / REGIMENS: Slow Lane Also Leads to Heart Health (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Mar. 27, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / CHOICES: Answers for Doctors on Suicide Question (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Mar. 27, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / PREVENTION: In Youth, It's Not Just About Cholesterol (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Mar. 27, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / REMEDIES: Preparing the Heart for a Needed Jolt (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Mar. 27, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / NUTRITION: Like Some Spinach With Those Fries? (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Mar. 27, 2001)
Q&A: Respiratory Distress (By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, Mar. 27, 2001)
Letters: Patients Teaching Students (By DEBORAH McNEIL et. al., Mar. 27, 2001)
FILM: A Night for Big Stars and Big Films (By RICK LYMAN, Mar. 27, 2001)
FILM CRITIC: At the Oscars, Carrots, Pepsi and a Kidnapping Joke (By CARYN JAMES, Mar. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Mar. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Mar. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Mar. 27, 2001)
THEATER: 'Judgment at Nuremberg': On Evil and the Citizen, No Answers Are Easy (By BRUCE WEBER, Mar. 27, 2001)
THEATER: Big Stars Act in Plays by Kids (By RALPH BLUMENTHAL, Mar. 27, 2001)
FASHION REVIEW: Hollywood Slips Uneasily Into Something Fashionable (By GINIA BELLAFANTE, Mar. 27, 2001)
FRONT ROW: Ambient Grace at the Academy Awards (By GUY TREBAY, Mar. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Mar. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Mar. 27, 2001)

Monday, March 26, 2001:
On This Day: March 26 (Herman Haupt 3/26/1817-12/14/1905, Edward Bellamy 3/26/1850-5/22/1898, A. E. Housman 3/26/1859-4/30/1936, Syngman Rhee 3/26/1875-7/19/1965, Othmar Ammann 3/26/1879-9/22/1965, James Conant 3/26/1893-2/11/1978, Joseph Campbell 3/26/1904-10/31/1987, Tennessee Williams 3/26/1911-2/25/1983, William C. Westmoreland 1914, Rufus Thomas 1917, Pierre Boulez 1925, Sandra Day O'Connor 1930, Leonard Nimoy 1931, Alan Arkin 1934, James Cann 1940, Erica Jong 1942, Bob Woodward 1943, Diana Ross 1944, Vicki Lawrence 1949, Ronnie McDowell 1950, Teddy Pendergrass 1950, Martin Short 1950, Elaine Chao 1953, Leeza Gibbons 1957, Jennifer Grey 1960)
Egypt & Israel Sign Formal Treaty, Ending a State of War After 30 Years; Sadat & Begin Praise Carter's Role
(By Bernard Gwertzman, March 26, 1979)
* Robert Frost Dies at 88; Kennedy Leads in Tribute
[3/26/1874-1/29/1963] (NY TIMES, January 30, 1963)
Sigurd Rascher, Who Showed the Sax Could Be Classy, Dies at 94 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Mar. 26, 2001)
Debra Bernhardt, Historian for the Unsung, Dies at 47 (By MARGALIT FOX, Mar. 26, 2001)
Ellen Hammer, Historian Who Wrote on the French in Indochina, Dies at 79 (By ERIC PACE, Mar. 26, 2001)
Herbie Jones, Jazz Trumpeter Who Worked Alongside 2 Giants, Dies at 74 (By WILLIAM H. HONAN, Mar. 26, 2001)
Norma Macmillan, Cartoon Voice Artist, Dies at 79 (NY TIMES, Mar. 26, 2001)
Women Are Close to Being Majority of Law Students (By JONATHAN D. GLATER, Mar. 26, 2001)
* As New Economy Cools, San Francisco Quivers (By EVELYN NIEVES, Mar. 26, 2001)
Some Say U.S. Lags in Blocking Foot-and-Mouth Disease at the Border (By ELIZABETH BECKER and CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS, Mar. 26, 2001)
Despite Emboldened Critics, Jesse Jackson Isn't Yielding (By PAM BELLUCK, Mar. 26, 2001)
* After 'Silent Spring,' Chemical Industry Put Spin on All It Brewed (By JOHN H. CUSHMAN Jr., Mar. 26, 2001)
President Plays It for Laughs at Dinner (By FRANK BRUNI, Mar. 26, 2001)
Public Lives: A Loyal Lieutenant Re-enlists to Serve the Bush Brigade (By FRANK BRUNI, Mar. 26, 2001)
Treasury Secretary Will Sell Alcoa Stock (By LESLIE KAUFMAN, Mar. 26, 2001)
News Analysis: Storm Clouds Over U.S.-Europe Relations (By ROGER COHEN, Mar. 26, 2001)
Zambia's History Is Lost in the Poverty of Today (By HENRI E. CAUVIN, Mar. 26, 2001)
* Thriving at 70, 'the George' Is a Great Gray Success [Washington Bridge] (By BLAINE HARDEN, Mar. 26, 2001)
Metropolitan Diary: Hello Spring (By ENID NEMY, Mar. 26, 2001)
OP-ED: How to Distribute AIDS Drugs (By CAROL BELLAMY, Mar. 26, 2001)
OP-ED: A Student Is Not an Input (By MICHELE TOLELA MYERS, Mar. 26, 2001)
OP-ED: North Korea, TV Nation (By RUSSELL WORKING, Mar. 26, 2001)
OP-ED: ESSAY: Working Its Will (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Mar. 26, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: The Mask Comes Off (By BOB HERBERT, Mar. 26, 2001)
* LETTERS: Now the Pressure Begins in Kindergarten (By MARY HEBRON et. al., Mar. 26, 2001)
* BUSINESS: CNBC Suffers Slings and Arrows of Market's Slide (By JIM RUTENBERG, Mar. 26, 2001)
* Advertising: Marketers Find Internet Opens New Avenues to Customers (By SAUL HANSELL, Mar. 26, 2001)
* March Brings No Sign of Improving Climate for Print Advertising (By FELICITY BARRINGER & ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Mar. 26, 2001)
* E-Commerce Report: Revised Forecasts Show How Assumptions Can Crumble (By BOB TEDESCHI, Mar. 26, 2001)
New Economy: Hyperbole Still Outruns Reality on the Wireless Web (By SIMON ROMERO, Mar. 26, 2001)
Another Big Roundup for Mr. Malone (By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, Mar. 26, 2001)
MTV to Mesh Its 2 Channels With Web Site (By BILL CARTER, Mar. 26, 2001)
Patents: A Company Receives a Software Patent and Will Soon Be Seeking Royalties (By SABRA CHARTRAND, Mar. 26, 2001)
A New Kind of Software Company for India (By MARK LANDLER, Mar. 26, 2001)
Two Biotech Companies Settle Gene-Chip Case (By ANDREW POLLACK, Mar. 26, 2001)
Media Talk: Murdoch Executive Calls Press Coverage of China Too Harsh (By BILL CARTER, Mar. 26, 2001)
Media Talk: Day-Rate Freelancers Tell Newsweek $400 Is Not Enough (By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Mar. 26, 2001)
Compressed Data: Saks.com Mines a List of E-Shoppers (By DAVID F. GALLAGHER, Mar. 26, 2001)
* Compressed Data: Corporate Sites Seem to Skimp on the Facts (By LAURIE J. FLYNN, Mar. 26, 2001)
ARTS: CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK: At the Oscars, Carrots, Pepsi and a Kidnapping Joke (By CARYN JAMES, Mar. 26, 2001)
ARTS: N.Y.U. Arts Scholarship Program Caps a Patron's Spending Spree (By DOREEN CARVAJAL, Mar. 26, 2001)
BOOKS: Nora Roberts's New Juicy Romance, With Grapes as a Major Squeeze (By JANET MASLIN, Mar. 26, 2001)
Culture Notes: Poet Corner (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Mar. 26, 2001)
DANCE: Royal Ballet of Flanders Performs 'The Three Musketeers' (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Mar. 26, 2001)
DANCE: Risa Steinberg: Strong Women of the 40's Step From Neglected Works (By JENNIFER DUNNING, Mar. 26, 2001)
FILM: On Hollywood's Big Night, Oscar Spreads the Glory Around (By RICK LYMAN, Mar. 26, 2001)
FILM: 'La Faute à Voltaire': Égalité Is Not Always for Everyone (By A. O. SCOTT, Mar. 26, 2001)
FILM: 'On Common Ground': Two Sides of a Battle Meet Again (By ELVIS MITCHELL, Mar. 26, 2001)
MUSIC: New York Philharmonic: The Winds Played On, With Flavorful Differences (By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Mar. 26, 2001)
MUSIC: Jazz at Lincoln Center to Reach From Brazil to New Orleans (NY TIMES, Mar. 26, 2001)
POP: U2 Kicks Off Tour With Unadulterated Rock, Straight From the Heart (By NEIL STRAUSS, Mar. 26, 2001)
THEATER: 'Servicemen': Wartime Love-Triangle Permutations (By BEN BRANTLEY, Mar. 26, 2001)
TV: 'South Pacific': Being Corny as Kansas Isn't So Simple Anymore (By JULIE SALAMON, Mar. 26, 2001)
TV: Oscar Ratings Fall to All-Time Low (By BILL CARTER, Mar. 26, 2001)
Trade Secrets': Rendering a Guilty Verdict on Corporate America (By NEIL GENZLINGER, Mar. 26, 2001)
* WRITERS ON WRITING: Richard Stern: Autumnal Accounting Endangers Happiness (By RICHARD STERN, Mar. 26, 2001)

Sunday, March 25, 2001:
On This Day: March 25 (Saint Catherine of Siena 3/25/1347-4/29/1380, Matilda Gage 3/25/1826-3/18/1898, Arturo Toscanini 3/25/1867-1/16/1957, William Knudsen 3/25/1879-4/27/1948, Sir David Lean 3/25/1908-4/16/1991, Simone Signoret 3/25/1921-9/30/1985, Flannery O'Connor 3/25/1925-8/3/1964, Penelope Gilliatt 3/25/1932-5/9/1993, Eileen Ford 1922, Jim Lovell 1928, Gene Shalit 1932, Gloria Steinem 1934, Anita Bryant 1940, Aretha Franklin 1942, Paul Michael Glaser 1943, Elton John 1947, John Stockwell 1961, Sarah Jessica Parker 1965, Debi Thomas 1967)
25,000 Go to Alabama's Capitol; Wallace Rebuffs Petitioners; White Rights Worker is Slain
(By Roy Reed, March 25, 1965)
* Bela Bartok Dies at 64 In Hospital Here
[3/25/1881-9/26/1945] (NY TIMES, September 27, 1945)
Adolph Levis, Pickled Goods Producer Who Invented a Beef Snack, Dies at 89 (By SAUL HANSELL, Mar. 25, 2001)
Charles Johnson, Proponent of Flat Earth, Dies at 76 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Mar. 25, 2001)
Gyula Obersovszky, Hungarian Writer, Dies at 74 (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Mar. 25, 2001)
Troubling Label for Hispanics: 'Girls Most Likely to Drop Out' (By DANA CANEDY, Mar. 25, 2001)
Killings Tied to Graft Shock Atlanta Suburb (By KEVIN SACK, Mar. 25, 2001)
Admissions Test Courses Help, but Not So Much, Study Finds (By GINA KOLATA, Mar. 25, 2001)
Scars Still Raw, Bush Clashes With McCain (By ALISON MITCHELL & FRANK BRUNI, Mar. 25, 2001)
Bush Giving New Life to Old Ideas About Possible Changes at the Pentagon (By JAMES DAO, Mar. 25, 2001)
Security Move Means 500 at F.B.I. Face Lie Detector (By ERIC SCHMITT, Mar. 25, 2001)
Quarantined Cattle in Texas Face Death Over Mad Cow Disease (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 25, 2001)
* The Bay of Pigs Revisited, but Arm in Arm (By TIM WEINER, Mar. 25, 2001)
Jewish Leaders Trade Barbs Over Austria's Nazi Legacy (By ROGER COHEN, Mar. 25, 2001)
In a Campaign Replay, a Peruvian Is Wooing Indians (By CLIFFORD KRAUSS, Mar. 25, 2001)
* Strong Quake Rocks Japan; At Least Two Are Killed (By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, Mar. 25, 2001)
Japan's Resurgent Far Right Tinkers With History (By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Mar. 25, 2001)
Seoul Fears U.S. Is Chilly About Détente With North (By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Mar. 25, 2001)
Diplomatically, French Is a Faded Rose in an English Garden (By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Mar. 25, 2001)
'Nasty Things' Can Intrude on Russian Envoy's Life (By MARC LACEY, Mar. 25, 2001)
Another Balkan Battle: Higher Learning (By STEVEN ERLANGER, Mar. 25, 2001)
* Tossing Out Old Magazines, by the Ton (By SHERRI DAY, Mar. 25, 2001)
Group Urges City to Develop as Biotechnology Center (By TERRY PRISTIN, Mar. 25, 2001)
Our Towns: A Wire-Thin Line Sharply Divides a Suburb's Jews (By MATTHEW PURDY, Mar. 25, 2001)
LIVING: Oscar Week: Stars Troop Through Hotel Suites Set Up Like Designer Showrooms
(By GINIA BELLAFANTE, Mar. 25, 2001)
The Best Supporting Role Is Just a Walk-On (By KIMBERLY STEVENS, Mar. 25, 2001)
Plasma TV: That New Object of Desire (By RICK MARIN, Mar. 25, 2001)
On the Street: Working in a Coal Mine (Photographs by BILL CUNNINGHAM, Mar. 25, 2001)
Vows: Jordana Merlis and Jeff Jacobs (By LOIS SMITH BRADY, Mar. 25, 2001)
The Age of Dissonance: My Nephew Made Me Say Uncle (By BOB MORRIS, Mar. 25, 2001)
VIEW: His Book Complete, Author Turns Model (By JOHN SEARLES, Mar. 25, 2001)
A Night in With Abe Vigoda: Only as Old as You Act (By LINDA LEE, Mar. 25, 2001)
GARDENING: Cuttings: Smelling Mud? Look for Snowdrops (By ELISABETH GINSBURG, Mar. 25, 2001)
* BUSINESS: Economic View: When Greenspan Thinks, Just Listen (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Mar. 25, 2001)
* Market Watch: Technology Tests the Strength of the Fed's Magic Wand (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Mar. 25, 2001)
* Microsoft Relies Again on an Inner Circle (By JOHN MARKOFF, Mar. 25, 2001)
Suddenly, at LVMH, Money Is an Object (By JOHN TAGLIABUE with CATHY HORYN, Mar. 25, 2001)
Market Insight: Is Japan Digging Out, or Falling Deeper? (By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Mar. 25, 2001)
Advanced Online Banking, Born of Necessity (By DAVID LIPSCHULTZ, Mar. 25, 2001)
* INVESTING: Rediscovering the Simple Beauty of Cash (By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, Mar. 25, 2001)
* Portfolios: Waiting for the Other Shoe to Drop on a Sagging Economy (By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Mar. 25, 2001)
Five Questions for Nancy F. Koehn: An Information Age Led by Business, So Far
(Interview by JULIE FLAHERTY, Mar. 25, 2001)
Book Value: Lessons From a Coach Who Kept a Distance, John Wooden (By FRED ANDREWS, Mar. 25, 2001)
Book Value: Lessons from a Coach Who Weaves a Cocoon, Mike Krzyzewski (By FRED ANDREWS, Mar. 25, 2001)
Midstream: Knowing What You Owe (By JAMES SCHEMBARI, Mar. 25, 2001)
On the Job: Conflict Resolution, Made Simple (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Mar. 25, 2001)
Investing With Edwin G. Vroom and Adele S. Weisman: Reserve Small-Cap Growth Fund
(By CAROLE GOULD, Mar. 25, 2001)
Private Sector: Can't Believe It's Iacocca? He Found a Better Butter (Compiled by RICK GLADSTONE, Mar. 25, 2001)
* Business Diary: Viewing the First Bubble and How It Blew Up [Tulip Mania] (By Judith H. Dobrzynski, Mar. 25, 2001)
Investing Diary: Looking for Relief From a Penny-Ante Fee [stock sale fee] (NY TIMES, Mar. 25, 2001)
Personal Business Diary: Unhappy E-Shoppers May Punish a Store (By, Mar. 25, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Contortions of Psychiatry in China (NY TIMES, Mar. 25, 2001)
EDITORIAL: THE RURAL LIFE: The Logic of Pigs (By VERLYN KLINKENBORG, Mar. 25, 2001)
OP-ED: Don't Abandon the Balkans (By WOLFGANG PETRITSCH, Mar. 25, 2001)
OP-ED: Spies Will Be Spies (By DAVID WISE, Mar. 25, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONGINGS: The Price of Power [California energy] (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Mar. 25, 2001)
CROSSROADS: The World Starts Getting in the Superpower's Way (By MARC D. CHARNEY, Mar. 25, 2001)
* All Science Is Computer Science (By GEORGE JOHNSON, Mar. 25, 2001)
* Oscar Likes Writers. Typewriters. (By JAY JENNINGS, Mar. 25, 2001)
* Paranoid Lately? You May Have Good Reason (By JENNY LYN BADER, Mar. 25, 2001)
Fossil Find: The Family of Man Grows a Little Larger (By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Mar. 25, 2001)
The Balkans: A One-Time Ally Becomes the Problem (By STEVEN ERLANGER, Mar. 25, 2001)
* The Bay of Pigs: Blast From the Past: Recipe for a Never-Ending Fiasco (By TIM WEINER, Mar. 25, 2001)
China: Hedging Their Bets (By ERIK ECKHOLM, Mar. 25, 2001)
* The Economy: A Slump That Won't Stay Home (By DAVID E. SANGER, Mar. 25, 2001)
The Middle East: Disillusionment With a Friend (By WILLIAM A. ORME Jr., Mar. 25, 2001)
Space, the Final Tourist Frontier (By, Mar. 25, 2001)
Who's Buying? (By ALAN COWELL, Mar. 25, 2001)
TRAVEL: Summer Rituals on Chincoteague (By PERRI KLASS, Mar. 25, 2001)
A Hidden Treasure No Longer [Ocracoke Island, NC] (By MARVIN HUNT, Mar. 25, 2001)
Falling for the Leopard [Botswana] (By LISA FUGARD, Mar. 25, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Mar. 25, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Mar. 25, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Mar. 25, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Mar. 25, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Mar. 25, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Mar. 25, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Mar. 25, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Mar. 25, 2001)
SCIENCE: Tourist Is Ready for Space (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 25, 2001)
Researchers Find Big Risk of Defect in Cloning Animals (By GINA KOLATA, Mar. 25, 2001)

Saturday, March 24, 2001:
On This Day: March 24 (Georgius Agricola 3/24/1494-11/21/1555, Rufus King 3/24/1755-4/29/1827, Thos. Spencer Baynes 3/24/1823-5/31/1887, William Morris 3/24/1834-10/3/1896, Andrew Mellon 3/24/1855-8/26/1937, Emile Fabre 3/24/1869-9/25/1955, Edward Weston 3/24/1886-1/1/1958, Fatty Arbuckle 3/24/1887-6/30/1933, Wilhelm Reich 3/24/1897-11/3/1957, Thomas E. Dewey 3/24/1902-3/16/1971, Bob Mackie 1940, Curtis Hanson 1945, Louie Anderson 1953, Robet Carradine 1954, Alyson Hannigan 1974)
Largest U.S. Tanker Spill Spews 270,000 Barrels Of Oil Off Alaska (By Philip Shabecoff, March 24, 1989)
* Harry Houdini Dies at 52 After Operations
[3/24/1874-10/31/1926] (NY TIMES, November 1, 1926)
Rowland Evans, TV Host and Conservative Columnist, Dies at 79 (By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Mar. 24, 2001)
Denny Griswold, Public Relations Editor, Dies at 92 (By, Mar. 24, 2001)
Robert Laxalt, Author, Dies at 77 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 24, 2001)
David McTaggart, a Builder of Greenpeace, Dies at 69 (By PAUL LEWIS, Mar. 24, 2001)
California's Choices All Look Painful (By LAURA M. HOLSON, Mar. 24, 2001)
Police Say Student Gunman Was Seeking School Official (By JAMES STERNGOLD, Mar. 24, 2001)
Democrats Back Immediate Tax Cut Proposed by G.O.P. (By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM, Mar. 24, 2001)
Supporter of Pardon for Fugitive Has Regrets (By ALISON LEIGH COWAN, Mar. 24, 2001)
Big Donors Unfazed by Prospect of Soft Money Limits (By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, Mar. 24, 2001)
Hard Money Becomes Focus of a Deal on Banning Soft (By PHILIP SHENON, Mar. 24, 2001)
Livestock Epidemic Widens Its Menace for British Farms (By WARREN HOGE, Mar. 24, 2001)
Russia Expels 4 Americans and Vows 'Other Measures' (By PATRICK E. TYLER, Mar. 24, 2001)
Huge Soccer Scandal Taints National Obsession of Brazil (By LARRY ROHTER, Mar. 24, 2001)
Bribery Scandal Engrosses TV Viewers in India (By CELIA W. DUGGER, Mar. 24, 2001)
News Analysis: U.S. Policy on Russia— A Tougher Stance (By JANE PERLEZ, Mar. 24, 2001)
C.I.A. Had Ability to Plant Bay of Pigs News, Document Shows (By TIM WEINER, Mar. 24, 2001)
Suspect Held in China Bombings (By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL, Mar. 24, 2001)
From Classrooms to Chat Rooms, All Threats Turn Serious (By KATE ZERNIKE, Mar. 24, 2001)
Night Life After Puffy: Frisks, but Not of Madonna (By MIREYA NAVARRO, Mar. 24, 2001)
OP-ED: A Space Station's Long Goodbye (By LEON ARON, Mar. 24, 2001)
OP-ED: Overtaxed Mothers Need Relief (By ANN CRITTENDEN, Mar. 24, 2001)
OP-ED: A Flawed Timber Market (By JIMMY CARTER, Mar. 24, 2001)
OP-ED: ABROAD AT HOME: 'No Greater Tragedy' (By ANTHONY LEWIS, Mar. 24, 2001)
LETTERS: A School Nightmare That We Must End (By GRAHAM MARKS et. al., Mar. 24, 2001)
* BUSINESS: Stocks Perk Up, and Nasdaq Posts Gain in Harsh Week
[Dow +115, Nasdaq +31] (By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Mar. 24, 2001)
Smackdown! W.W.F. to Buy Wrestling Rival (By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN, Mar. 24, 2001)
* ARTS: Snoopy: A Beagle With Brains Becomes Teachers' Pet (By SARAH BOXER, Mar. 24, 2001)
* ARTS: Supply and Demand Among the Faithful (By CHRIS SHEA, Mar. 24, 2001)
BOOKS: SHELF LIFE: Witnesses to Revolution Wrote History's First Draft (By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN, Mar. 24, 2001)
DANCE: 'L'Allegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderato': Morris Embraces Handel and Milton
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Mar. 24, 2001)
* FILM: 'The Day I Became a Woman': Outrun Fate? Not for Iranian Women (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Mar. 24, 2001)
FILM: 'Foul King': A Korean Milquetoast Wrestles Misery to the Ground (By A. O. SCOTT, Mar. 24, 2001)
MUSIC: Mariss Jansons: In a Whole Concert, Just Half a Premiere (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Mar. 24, 2001)
OPERA: Beverly Sills: You've Come a Long Way, Baby Doe (By RALPH BLUMENTHAL, Mar. 24, 2001)
POP REVIEW: Carman: Garden Crowd Boos the Devil (By NEIL STRAUSS, Mar. 24, 2001)
THEATER: 'Bloomer Girl': Of Feminism and Slavery (By BRUCE WEBER, Mar. 24, 2001)
TV: McMahon Readies XFL for Life Without NBC (By RICHARD SANDOMIR, Mar. 24, 2001)
SCIENCE: Russians Find Pride, and Regret, in Mir's Splashdown (By PATRICK E. TYLER, Mar. 24, 2001)
* Sky Watch: Venus Bids Adieu (By JOE RAO, Mar. 24, 2001)
HEALTH: Farmers Joining State Efforts Against Bioengineered Crops (By ANDREW POLLACK, Mar. 24, 2001)

Friday, March 23, 2001:
On This Day: March 23 (Margaret of Anjou 3/23/1430-8/25/1482, Pierre-Simon Laplace 3/23/1749-3/5/1827, Roger Martin du Gard 3/23/1881-8/22/1958, Juan Gris 3/23/1887-5/11/1927, Sidney Hillman 3/23/1887-7/10/1946, Cedric Gibbons 3/23/1893-7/26/1960, Erich Fromm 3/23/1900-3/18/1980, Marty Allen 1922, Mark Rydell 1934, Chaka Khan 1953, Amanda Plummer 1957, Keri Russell 1976)
Grissom Maneuvers the Gemini as He and Young Make 3 Orbits in Test for a Space Rendezvous
(By Evert Clark, March 23, 1965)
Joan Crawford, Screen Star, Dies at 69 in Manhattan Home
[3/23/1908-5/10/1977] (By PETER B. FLINT, May 11, 1977)
Jacob Kainen, Painter and Print Curator, Dies at 91 (By ROBERTA SMITH, Mar. 23, 2001)
* William Hanna, Who Created Cartoon Characters, Dies at 90 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 23, 2001)
Norma Macmillan, Voice for Cartoons, Dies at 79 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 23, 2001)
Gunman Fires on School Near Site of Earlier Shooting (By TODD S. PURDUM, Mar. 23, 2001)
Tally of Students Equals Number at Boomer Peak (By ERIC SCHMITT, Mar. 23, 2001)
Senators Seeking a $60 Billion Cut in Taxes for 2001 (By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM, Mar. 23, 2001)
* Mir Space Station Sizzles to Ending Over Pacific (By PATRICK E. TYLER, Mar. 23, 2001)
News Analysis: In Espionage Game, Get Caught, Lose Players (By JAMES RISEN, Mar. 23, 2001)
* Bay of Pigs Enemies Finally Sit Down Together (By TIM WEINER, Mar. 23, 2001)
First Meeting: China Testing Firmer Way of Bush Team (By MARC LACEY & DAVID E. SANGER, Mar. 23, 2001)
Russia Calls Expulsions by U.S. Hostile Act and Vows to Retaliate (By PATRICK E. TYLER with JANE PERLEZ, Mar. 23, 2001)
Fox, on Tour, Stresses Mexico's Economic Importance for California (By GINGER THOMPSON, Mar. 23, 2001)
China Says U.S. Scholar 'Confessed Her Crimes' (By ERIK ECKHOLM, Mar. 23, 2001)
The Calmly Elegant Kofi Annan Seems Good Bet for Re-election (By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Mar. 23, 2001)
MY MANHATTAN: Musical Churches: Spiritual High Notes From a Deep River (By SUSAN JACOBY, Mar. 23, 2001)
Public Lives: Man Who Saved Term Limits Sees History Lesson (By CHRIS HEDGES, Mar. 23, 2001)
After 53 Years, Fresh Kills Gets Its Final Load of Trash (By KIRK JOHNSON, Mar. 23, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Containing Foot-and-Mouth Disease (NY TIMES, Mar. 23, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Repercussions of a Spy Case (NY TIMES, Mar. 23, 2001)
OP-ED: Piety at Kyoto Didn't Cool the Planet (By DAVID G. VICTOR, Mar. 23, 2001)
OP-ED: What the Census Doesn't Count (By RUSSELL THORNTON, Mar. 23, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Markets Call the Tune (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Mar. 23, 2001)
OP-ED: U.S.-Business Effort Urged on Cyberterror (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 23, 2001)
LETTERS: War of Words: Underwood, Dell or Quill? (By MILTON LEWIS, Mar. 23, 2001)
BUSINESS: Stocks Get Late Bounce as Buyers Move In
[Dow -98, Nasdaq +67] (By ALEX BERENSON, Mar. 23, 2001)
A Glut of Cable TV in India (By MARK LANDLER, Mar. 23, 2001)
Procter to Cut 9,600 Jobs in Drive to Trim Its Overhead (By JULIAN E. BARNES, Mar. 23, 2001)
In Leaving Seattle, Boeing Also Asserts It's Not Just a Plane Builder (By LAURENCE ZUCKERMAN, Mar. 23, 2001)
Advertising: ABC Holds Out Longest for the Oscars (By STUART ELLIOTT, Mar. 23, 2001)
Schwab Plans Up to 3,400 Job Cuts (By DANNY HAKIM, Mar. 23, 2001)
Economic Jitters Send Latin American Stocks Reeling (By CLIFFORD KRAUSS, Mar. 23, 2001)
Warning From Microsoft on False Digital Signatures (By JOHN MARKOFF, Mar. 23, 2001)
Lucent Again Cuts Offering Price for Agere Spinoff (By CHRIS GAITHER, Mar. 23, 2001)
Guinness Book Is Up for Sale, Insiders Say (By SUZANNE KAPNER, Mar. 23, 2001)
Addenda: Creative Executive Is on the Move Again [Gary Topolewski] (By, Mar. 23, 2001)
Key Forecasting Gauge Declined in February (By REUTERS, Mar. 23, 2001)
Fed Minutes Show Concern Over Falling Economy (By REUTERS, Mar. 23, 2001)
ARTS: Contents (NY TIMES, Mar. 23, 2001)
ART CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK: Globalization on Film: Message in a Coca-Cola Can
(By A. O. SCOTT, Mar. 23, 2001)
ART: 'BitStreams' and 'Data Dynamics': Creativity, Digitally Remastered (By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Mar. 23, 2001)
ART: International Asian Art Fair: When East Goes West, The Twain Meet Here (By HOLLAND COTTER, Mar. 23, 2001)
ART: Rosemarie Trockel: Drawings as Enigmas Wrapped in Metaphors (By GRACE GLUECK, Mar. 23, 2001)
DANCE: 'Wind': A Cosmos Aborning in Fantasies (By JACK ANDERSON, Mar. 23, 2001)
FILM: 'Heartbreakers': It's Take Your Daughter to Work Day (By A. O. SCOTT, Mar. 23, 2001)
FILM: 'Say It Isn't So': Something About Brotherly Love (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Mar. 23, 2001)
FILM: 'The Cashier Wants to Go to the Seaside': Meek or Not, She Really Wants What She Wants
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Mar. 23, 2001)
FILM: Friendly Persuasion': Even Veils Can't Hide the Artistry of Iranians (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Mar. 23, 2001)
FILM: 'Bartleby': So You're a Nowhere Man in a Nowhere World, Now Get Back to Work (By A. O. SCOTT, Mar. 23, 2001)
'The Brothers': Sex and the Single (or Married) Man (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Mar. 23, 2001)
Inside Art: Christie's East Is Heading West (By CAROL VOGEL, Mar. 23, 2001)
TV WEEKEND: 'Wit': Death, Mighty Thou Art (By CARYN JAMES, Mar. 23, 2001)
SCIENCE FILM: 'Galápagos': The Creatures That Darwin Couldn't Visit (By A. O. SCOTT, Mar. 23, 2001)

Thursday, March 22, 2001:
On This Day: March 22 (Maximilian I 3/22/1459-1/12/1519, Sir Anthony Van Dyck 3/22/1599-12/9/1641, Anton Raphael Mengs 3/22/1728-6/29/1779, Thomas Crawford 3/22/1814-10/10/1857, Robert Millikan 3/22/1868-12/19/1953, Arthur Vandenberg 3/22/1884-4/18/1951, Joseph Schildkraut 3/22/1895-1/21/1964, Ruth Page 3/22/1899-4/7/1991, Johannes Brinkman 3/22/1902-5/6/1949, James Gavin 3/22/1907-2/23/1990, Karl Malden 1912, Marcel Marceau 1923, Allen H. Neuharth 1924, Stephen Sondheim 1930, William Shatner 1931, Orrin Hatch 1934, M. Emmet Walsh 1935, Andrew Lloyd Webber 1948, Fanny Ardant 1949, Bob Costas 1952, Stephanie Mills 1957)
Equal Rights Amendment is Approved by Congress (By Eileen Shanahan, March 22, 1972)
Louis L'Amour, Writer, Is Dead; Famed Chronicler of West Was 80
[3/22/1908-6/10/1988] (By JAMES BARRON, June 13, 1988)
Chung Ju Yung, Founder of the Hyundai Group, Dies at 85 (By DON KIRK, Mar. 22, 2001)
Thomas Pryor, Editor, Dies at 89 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 22, 2001)
Norman Rodway, Actor With the Royal Shakespeare Company, Dies at 72 (By MEL GUSSOW, Mar. 22, 2001)
* Helen Bevington, Wry Author, Professor and Tireless Tourist, Dies at 94 (By DOREEN CARVAJAL, Mar. 22, 2001)
Edward J. Fee, Supervisor of Large Construction Projects, Dies at 92 (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Mar. 22, 2001)
Boeing, Jolting Seattle, Will Move Headquarters (By SAM HOWE VERHOVEK with LAURENCE ZUCKERMAN, Mar. 22, 2001)
Todays Students Equal Baby-Boom Peak of 1970's, Census Shows (By ERIC SCHMITT, Mar. 22, 2001)
Second San Diego-Area High School Hit by Gunfire (By CHRISTOPHER S. WREN, Mar. 22, 2001)
* Helping Hands at Spring Break (By JODI WILGOREN, Mar. 22, 2001)
The Era of Showgirls Is Leaving Las Vegas (By RICK BRAGG, Mar. 22, 2001)
Poor County Feels Domino Effect of Energy Crisis (By BARBARA WHITAKER, Mar. 22, 2001)
Russian Diplomats Ordered Expelled in a Countermove (By JAMES RISEN and JANE PERLEZ, Mar. 22, 2001)
Iraqis Now Daring to Talk of Life After Hussein (By JOHN F. BURNS, Mar. 22, 2001)
China Holding U.S. Scholar in Isolation (By ERIK ECKHOLM, Mar. 22, 2001)
Lo Khe Journal: A Folk Tradition Fades, but the Melody Lingers On (By SETH MYDANS, Mar. 22, 2001)
Five Britons' Mad Cow Deaths Traced to Butchering Methods (By WARREN HOGE, Mar. 22, 2001)
Justice, While Not Blind to Celebrity, Is Not Exactly Dazzled, Either (By DAVID ROHDE, Mar. 22, 2001)
Public Lives: Suddenly on the Radar in Hollywood's Stratosphere (By ROBIN FINN, Mar. 22, 2001)
OP-ED: A Sensible Tax on Fortunes (By MICHAEL S. McPHERSON & MORTON OWEN SCHAPIRO, Mar. 22, 2001)
OP-ED: Arsenic and Old Laws (By CHUCK FOX, Mar. 22, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: A Bogus Race Issue (By BOB HERBERT, Mar. 22, 2001)
OP-ED: ESSAY: Arik and George (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Mar. 22, 2001)
LETTERS: Bamboozled in Bangalore (By SARAH FORBES ORWIG, Mar. 22, 2001)
* BUSINESS: Shares Slide Further as Dow Nears Bear Market Territory
[Dow -234, Nasdaq -27] (By MICHAEL BRICK, Mar. 22, 2001)
Market Place: The Dollar Is Still Positively Robust (By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Mar. 22, 2001)
Procter & Gamble Is Expected to Announce Layoffs (By JULIAN E. BARNES, Mar. 22, 2001)
3Com Reports Quarter Loss (By CHRIS GAITHER, Mar. 22, 2001)
* New Mac Operating System (By JOHN MARKOFF, Mar. 22, 2001)
* Advertising: Topps Uses Old-Style Cards to Celebrate (By BERNARD STAMLER, Mar. 22, 2001)
Economic Scene: Waistlines Are Now Victims of Economic Progress (By VIRGINIA POSTREL, Mar. 22, 2001)
U.S. Gyrations of Little Effect on Many Asian Stock Markets (By MARK LANDLER, Mar. 22, 2001)
American Is Guiding a Market for China (By CRAIG S. SMITH, Mar. 22, 2001)
ART: Glen Baxter: An Incongruous Matchmaker, Cross-Indexing the Real World (By MEL GUSSOW, Mar. 22, 2001)
* ARTS ABROAD: Picasso's Carnal Carnival (By ALAN RIDING, Mar. 22, 2001)
* BOOKS: Kerouac's 'Road' Scroll Is Going to Auction (By KATHRYN SHATTUCK, Mar. 22, 2001)
BOOKS: 'Romancing': Under Any Name, a Novelist Gone and Forgotten (By JANET MASLIN, Mar. 22, 2001)
MAKING BOOKS: Heeding a Call of the Faithful (By MARTIN ARNOLD, Mar. 22, 2001)
Culture Notes: Fresh Surroundings (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Mar. 22, 2001)
DANCE: Ballet Tech: It's Minnie Mouse, to Mozart's Rescue (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Mar. 22, 2001)
DANCE: Hearings Start in Suit Over Graham Legacy (By JENNIFER DUNNING, Mar. 22, 2001)
MUSIC: Berlin's Musik-Biennale: An Airing, and Presto, the Artist Is Reborn (By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Mar. 22, 2001)
THEATER: 'Bat Boy': Who Ordered the Bloody Mary on the Rocks? (By BRUCE WEBER, Mar. 22, 2001)
TV: Broadway Takes a Detour Through the Living Room (By BERNARD WEINRAUB, Mar. 22, 2001)
LIVING: Hollywood on the Hudson: For Two Designers, a Set That Won't Be Struck
(By RAUL A. BARRENECHE, Mar. 22, 2001)
LIVING: Far From Tigers and Dragons, a Screenwriter Produces a House (By WILLIAM L. HAMILTON, Mar. 22, 2001)
Developer Daughters, Born to Build (By TRACIE ROZHON, Mar. 22, 2001)
Personal Shopper: How Low Can You Go? (By MARIANNE ROHRLICH, Mar. 22, 2001)
Turf: Mysteriously, Real Estate Rolls On (By TRACIE ROZHON, Mar. 22, 2001)
CIRCUITS: Contents (NY TIMES, Mar. 22, 2001)
STATE OF THE ART: Software Beckons Preschoolers to the PC (By DAVID POGUE, Mar. 22, 2001)
* Robots Can Learn Much From High-Tech Playthings (By MICHEL MARRIOTT, Mar. 22, 2001)
For Hard-Core Gamers, the Lure of the East (By DAVID KUSHNER, Mar. 22, 2001)
GAME THEORY: Roller Coasters That Cowards Can Love (By PETER OLAFSON, Mar. 22, 2001)
ONLINE SHOPPER: Using Your Mouse to Pick Out Furniture (By MICHELLE SLATALLA, Mar. 22, 2001)
* WHAT'S NEXT: To Store Data, a Hologram 'Picture' Is Worth a Million Bits (By IAN AUSTEN, Mar. 22, 2001)
Canada Could Adopt a Proposal to Silence Annoying Cell Phones (By IAN AUSTEN, Mar. 22, 2001)
BASICS: Grab the W-2, a 1040 and Aspirin, Then the Software (By STEVEN E. BRIER, Mar. 22, 2001)
* SCREEN GRAB: At Blooper Sites, the Fun Is in the Details (By CATHERINE GREENMAN, Mar. 22, 2001)
Faster Data Connection Waits Impatiently in Line (By AARON DONOVAN, Mar. 22, 2001)
Protest Music Before It Became a Rock-Star Pose (By SHELLY FREIERMAN, Mar. 22, 2001)
Palm Offers 2 Models That Are Built to Grow (By By STEPHEN C. MILLER, Mar. 22, 2001)
A Mobile CD-Rewritable Drive That is Freed From the Desktop (By ADAM BAER, Mar. 22, 2001)
BlackBerry Pagers Get an Update on Updates (By KATIE HAFNER, Mar. 22, 2001)
Cordless and No Longer Blind: See How the Mouse Run (By STEPHEN C. MILLER, Mar. 22, 2001)
A New Online Spot to Gather to Find a Game or Analyze One (By MICHEL MARRIOTT, Mar. 22, 2001)
The Little Hand on the Net (NY TIMES, Mar. 22, 2001)
* Q & A: When Windows Tries to Shut Down but Can't (By J. D. BIERSDORFER, Mar. 22, 2001)
SCIENCE: Skull May Alter Experts' View of Human Descent's Branches (By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Mar. 22, 2001)
Russians Trying to Steady Mir as She Dies (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 22, 2001)
HEALTH: U.S., Cautious on Mad Cow, Seizes Flock of Sheep (NY TIMES, Mar. 22, 2001)
Study of Chemicals in Americans Shows Encouraging Trends (By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Mar. 22, 2001)

Wednesday, March 21, 2001:
On This Day: March 21 (St. Nicholas of Flue 3/21/1417-3/21/1487, Johann S. Bach 3/21/1685-7/28/1750, Benito Juarez 3/21/1806-7/18/1872, Alice Henry 3/21/1857-2/14/1943, Phyllis McGinley 3/21/1905-2/22/1978, John D. Rockefeller III 3/21/1906-7/10/1978, Nizar Qabbani 3/21/1923-4/30/1998, Al Freeman Jr. 1934, Kathleen Widdoes 1939, Marie-Christine Barrault 1944, Timothy Dalton 1944, Gary Oldman 1958, Matthew Broderick 1962, Rosie O'Donnell 1962
The Big Parade: On the Road to Montgomery [9 photos]
(By Roy Reed, March 21, 1965)
Florenz Ziegfeld Dies at 63 in Hollywood After Long Illness
[3/21/1869-7/22/1932] (Associated Press, July 23, 1932)
Maynard Mack, English Professor, Dies at 90 (NY TIMES, Mar. 21, 2001)
Richard Harwood, Washington Post Ombudsman, Dies at 75 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Mar. 21, 2001)
Ralph Thomas, Director of 'Doctor' Films, Dies at 85 (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Mar. 21, 2001)
Robert L. Clare Jr., Ran Wall St. Law Firm, Dies at 86 (By, Mar. 21, 2001)
Captain of Sub Accepts Blame, and Spreads It (By JAMES STERNGOLD, Mar. 21, 2001)
Ad Intended to Stir Up Campuses More Than Succeeds in Its Mission (By DIANA JEAN SCHEMO, Mar. 21, 2001)
California Orders Blackouts for a Second Straight Day (By EVELYN NIEVES, Mar. 21, 2001)
News Analysis: Bush Faces Quandaries of Economy and Energy (By DAVID E. SANGER, Mar. 21, 2001)
Capitol Sketchbook: A Multimillionaire Votes to Level the Playing Field (By LIZETTE ALVAREZ, Mar. 21, 2001)
* Lessons: In the Kindergartens, a Misguided Push (By RICHARD ROTHSTEIN, Mar. 21, 2001)
* President of Mexico Does Not Stand on Ceremony (By GINGER THOMPSON & TIM WEINER, Mar. 21, 2001)
Bush and Sharon Find Much in Common (By JANE PERLEZ, Mar. 21, 2001)
Moscow Says Remarks by U.S. Resurrect 'Spirit of Cold War' (By PATRICK E. TYLER, Mar. 21, 2001)
Ozd Journal: Recycling the Ash Heap of History in Hungary (By STEVEN ERLANGER, Mar. 21, 2001)
* Manhattan School Paper Enters World of Online Journalism (By LYNETTE HOLLOWAY, Mar. 21, 2001)
* Man Broke Into Accounts of Celebrities, Police Say (By JAYSON BLAIR & WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM, Mar. 21, 2001)
* Public Lives: An Impresario's Passions, Gratified (By ROBIN FINN, Mar. 21, 2001)
Our Towns: The Market Is Just Sound, Not Fury, Here (By MATTHEW PURDY, Mar. 21, 2001)
NYC: Low-Tech in Subways, Please (By CLYDE HABERMAN, Mar. 21, 2001)
SPORTS: Anything Happening With Lewis-Tyson? (By DAVE ANDERSON, Mar. 21, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Fed and the Stock Market (NY TIMES, Mar. 21, 2001)
EDITORIAL: China Comes Calling (NY TIMES, Mar. 21, 2001)
OP-ED: A Partnership Worth Preserving (By JIEMIAN YANG, Mar. 21, 2001)
OP-ED: My Underwood, Forever (By NICK LYONS, Mar. 21, 2001)
OP-ED: The Reforms a Tax Cut Ruins (By GENE SPERLING, Mar. 21, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: Half a Loaf (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Mar. 21, 2001)
LETTERS: In Class, but Virtually Anywhere (By PAUL KELTER, Mar. 21, 2001)
LETTERS: Lessons From Antarctica (By MARGOT MORRELL, Mar. 21, 2001)
* BUSINESS: Shares Fall Hard as Fed Rate Cut Disappoints Investors
[Dow -238, Nasdaq -94] (By MICHAEL BRICK, Mar. 21, 2001)
* Fed Lowers Rates and Signals Need for Further Cuts/A> (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Mar. 21, 2001)
* Market Place: Stock Investors Fighting the Fed in Second Round (By ALEX BERENSON, Mar. 21, 2001)
* Cryptologists Discover Flaw in E-Mail Security Program (By JAMES GLANZ, Mar. 21, 2001)
* Hi, I'm in Bangalore (but I Dare Not Tell) (By MARK LANDLER, Mar. 21, 2001)
Consumers Rushing to Shed Themselves of High-Interest Debt (By RIVA D. ATLAS, Mar. 21, 2001)
Management: Where Language Is Not a Barrier (By ANTHONY DePALMA, Mar. 21, 2001)
Music Industry and Napster Still at Odds (By MATT RICHTEL, Mar. 21, 2001)
Advertising: Ikea Aggressively Goes After Consumers (By SUZANNE KAPNER, Mar. 21, 2001)
Dollar Follows Downward Spiral of Stocks (By REUTERS, Mar. 21, 2001)
The Boss: Charging Full Tilt, Thanks to Grandma (By C. PATRICK GARNER, Mar. 21, 2001)
Workplace: Laid Off and Locked Out of Your PC (By MARY WILLIAMS WALSH, Mar. 21, 2001)
My Job: I End Each Day Empty-Handed (By TOM DeSTEFANO, Mar. 21, 2001)
Sun Plans to Unveil Servers to Upgrade Midrange Products (By BARNABY J. FEDER, Mar. 21, 2001)
Hewlett-Packard Pins High Hopes on New Printers (By CHRIS GAITHER, Mar. 21, 2001)
New N.A.S.D. Internet Rules (NY TIMES, Mar. 21, 2001)
ECollege to Lay Off 35 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 21, 2001)
Executives Signal No Layoffs in San Jose Paper's Newsroom (By FELICITY BARRINGER, Mar. 21, 2001)
DANCE: Condors: A Monty Python Tone in a Japanese Troupe (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Mar. 21, 2001)
FILM: Some Top Oscar Categories Are Just Too Close to Call (By RICK LYMAN, Mar. 21, 2001)
MUSIC: Mariss Jansons: Winning Some, Losing Some, Rehearsing Some (By ANNE MIDGETTE, Mar. 21, 2001)
MUSIC CRITIC: Maurizio Pollini: Freshening the Old and Warming the New (By ALLAN KOZINN, Mar. 21, 2001)
THEATER: 'Machinal': Infamous Killer in Everywoman Guise (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Mar. 21, 2001)
* LIVING: The Chicken: It Came. It Clucked. It Conquered. (By WILLIAM GRIMES, Mar. 21, 2001)
Olives: Something for Everyone, on Every Plate (By WILLIAM GRIMES, Mar. 21, 2001)
'Fast Food Nation': Catching America With Its Hand in the Fries (By REGINA SCHRAMBLING, Mar. 21, 2001)
Bush's Coattails Bear Precious Crumbs for Austin Restaurants (By R. W. APPLE Jr., Mar. 21, 2001)
The Chef: It's Just Dessert, Don't Be So Sweet (By CHARLIE TROTTER & REGINA SCHRAMBLING, Mar. 21, 2001)
Tartines: Sandwiches Dressed in Couture [4 recipes] (By DORIE GREENSPAN, Mar. 21, 2001)
Food Stuff: Peasant Food From a Kitchen Inspired by a King (By FLORENCE FABRICANT, Mar. 21, 2001)
The Minimalist: This Fish Adores Salt (By MARK BITTMAN, Mar. 21, 2001)
SCIENCE: Spy-Analysis Agency Says It May Have Found Lost Mars Lander (By WILLIAM J. BROAD, Mar. 21, 2001)
NASA Opposing Russian Plan for Tourist on Space Station (By WARREN E. LEARY, Mar. 21, 2001)
HEALTH: Study Links Estrogen Use to Cancer Risk (By DENISE GRADY, Mar. 21, 2001)
* HEALTH & WELL-BEING: What's This Pill For? Log On to Find Out (By ANDREA KANNAPELL, Mar. 21, 2001)
HEALTH & WELL-BEING: For Elderly, Relief for Emotional Ills Can Be Elusive (By LOIS B. MORRIS, Mar. 21, 2001)

Tuesday, March 20, 2001:
On This Day: March 20 (Ovid 3/20/43 BC-17 AD, Jean-Antoine Houdon 3/20/1741-7/15/1828, George Caleb Bingham 3/20/1811-7/7/1879, Henrik Ibsen 3/20/1828-5/23/1906, Charles William Eliot 3/20/1834-8/22/1926, B. F. Skinner 3/20/1904-8/18/1990, Sir Michael Redgrave 3/20/1908-3/21/1985, Alfonso Garcia Robles 3/20/1911-9/2/1991, John Ehrlichman 3/20/1925-2/14/1999, Carl Reiner 1922, Fred Rogers 1928, Hal Linden 1931, Don Edwards 1939, Brian Mulroney 1929, Bobby Orr 1948, William Hurt 1950, Spike Lee 1957, Theresa Russell 1957, Holly Hunter 1958, Kathy Ireland 1963)
Terror In Tokyo: Hundreds In Japan Hunt Gas Attackers After 8 Die
(By Nicholas D. Kristof, March 20, 1995)
F. W. Taylor, Expert in Efficiency, Dies at 59
[3/20/1856-3/21/1915] (NY TIMES, March 22, 1915)
Tran Van Lam, Top South Vietnam Aide, Dies at 88 (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Mar. 20, 2001)
Wallace Hayes, Aeronautics Expert, Dies at 82 (By RICHARD WITKIN, Mar. 20, 2001)
John Ardoin, Music Critic and Author, Dies at 66 (NY TIMES, Mar. 20, 2001)
More Rolling Blackouts in Heat-Stricken California (By TODD S. PURDUM, Mar. 20, 2001)
* On Tape, Tense Aides Meet After Reagan Shooting (By ADAM CLYMER, Mar. 20, 2001)
Bush and Israeli Leader Hold Talks on Prospects for Peace (By DAVID STOUT, Mar. 20, 2001)
Powell Shifts Emphasis of Mideast Policy (By JANE PERLEZ, Mar. 20, 2001)
Vatican Radiation? Body Snatchers? This Is Italy? (By ALESSANDRA STANLEY, Mar. 20, 2001)
With Glare Hitting Clinton, Limelight Eludes Schumer (By RAYMOND HERNANDEZ, Mar. 20, 2001)
* Coffee-Stained Dali Awaits a New Chance at Rikers (By BLAINE HARDEN, Mar. 20, 2001)
* Public Lives: Renaissance Clown Meets Like-Minded Elephant (By GLENN COLLINS, Mar. 20, 2001)
Eclectic Set of Inductees Join the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (By NEIL STRAUSS, Mar. 20, 2001)
Tunnel Vision: The Subway Voice of the Future Is a Recording (By RANDY KENNEDY, Mar. 20, 2001)
OP-ED: The Guns Arrive in Macedonia (By ISO RUSI, Mar. 20, 2001)
* OP-ED: Lectures vs. Laptops (By IAN AYRES, Mar. 20, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Policy Free-for-All (By THOMAS FRIEDMAN, Mar. 20, 2001)
OP-ED: PUBLIC INTERESTS: Anxious in Alabama (By GAIL COLLINS, Mar. 20, 2001)
LETTERS: A Flight of Fancy, Straight to Her Heart (By TED ANO, Mar. 20, 2001)
LETTERS: Pascal in Vegas (By TERENCE BALL, Mar. 20, 2001)
BUSINESS: Shares Gain as Investors Await Fed Action
[Dow =136, Nasdaq +60] (By MICHAEL BRICK, Mar. 20, 2001)
Microsoft Confronts Privacy Fears (By JOHN MARKOFF, Mar. 20, 2001)
Questions on Firings and Severance at Computer Associates (By ALEX BERENSON, Mar. 20, 2001)
American Guides China in Revamping of Market (By CRAIG S. SMITH, Mar. 20, 2001)
ARTS: Contents (NY TIMES, Mar. 20, 2001)
ARTS: REVISIONS: Swingin' on a Rainbow Without Hype, Attitude or Poses (By MARGO JEFFERSON, Mar. 20, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'Vermeer': An Ear to the Ground in That Luminous Silence (By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Mar. 20, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'Ultimate Journey': Footprints in the Sand, Impressions Upon the Heart
(By DONALD S. LOPEZ Jr., Mar. 20, 2001)
Culture Notes: Seeing the Light [glass or other translucent materials] (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Mar. 20, 2001)
Culture Notes: Winslow Homer's Odyssey (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Mar. 20, 2001)
MUSIC: Esa-Pekka Salonen Serves Stravinsky -- Breezy, Fresh and Crunchy (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Mar. 20, 2001)
MUSIC CRITIC: A Pleasant Swim With Gunther Schuller, the Man Who Named the Third Stream
(By BEN RATLIFF, Mar. 20, 2001)
OPERA: 'The Gambler': Spinning the Roulette Wheel With a Firm Russian Hand
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Mar. 20, 2001)
POP: Jill Scott: Woman of Many Genres, Not to Mention Speeches (By NEIL STRAUSS, Mar. 20, 2001)
THEATER: 'In Dreams and Gimpel': One Actor, Two Stories and the Burden of Memories
(By BRUCE WEBER, Mar. 20, 2001)
THEATER: Christine Pedi Impresses With Her Parodies of Broadway's Divas (By ROBIN POGREBIN, Mar. 20, 2001)
TV NOTES: 'America Undercover': Seamy or Serious, It's Now Center Stage (By JIM RUTENBERG, Mar. 20, 2001)
FASHION REVIEW: Black Mood in Paris: Watch Out for Bad Times (By GINIA BELLAFANTE, Mar. 20, 2001)
FASHION DIARY: Men's Fashion Does Without the Clothes (By GUY TREBAY, Mar. 20, 2001)
SCIENCE: Contents (NY TIMES, Mar. 20, 2001)
The Week in Science: Startling Reverberations (By NICHOLAS WADE, Mar. 20, 2001)
Refining the Art of Measurement (By MALCOLM W. BROWNE, Mar. 20, 2001)
* ESSAY: No Man, Quark or Electron Is an Island (By DENNIS OVERBYE, Mar. 20, 2001)
* Before Rome's Baths, There Was the Maya Sweat House (By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Mar. 20, 2001)
* Experts Dissect a Primordial Banquet (By KENNETH CHANG, Mar. 20, 2001)
Small Yellow Bean Sets Off International Patent Dispute (By TIMOTHY PRATT, Mar. 20, 2001)
Florida to Get Big Butterfly Center (By STEVE COATES, Mar. 20, 2001)
* OBSERVATORY: How Plants Got Leaves (By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Mar. 20, 2001)
OBSERVATORY: Comet's Unusual Show (By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Mar. 20, 2001)
OBSERVATORY: More Work for Galileo Spacecraft (By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Mar. 20, 2001)
Big Dinosaur Prints Found (By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, Mar. 20, 2001)
Letters: Drug Evidence on File (By DR. JEROME LEVINE et. al., Mar. 20, 2001)
HEALTH: Contents (NY TIMES, Mar. 20, 2001)
New Findings on Hormone Therapy (By DENISE GRADY, Mar. 20, 2001)
Drug Hailed as a Heart and Stroke Protector (By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Mar. 20, 2001)
A Molecular Offspring, Off to Join the AIDS Wars (By ABIGAIL ZUGER, Mar. 20, 2001)
* REFLECTIONS: Our House Wasn't Dirty Enough? [Asthma] (By DENISE GRADY, Mar. 20, 2001)
FACING OFF: Medical Students in Hospitals: Patients Need to Be Teachers (By GALE SCOTT, Mar. 20, 2001)
FACING OFF: Medical Students in Hospitals: Patients Have a Right to Know (By GALE SCOTT, Mar. 20, 2001)
* Teenagers Find Health Answers With a Click (By BONNIE ROTHMAN MORRIS, Mar. 20, 2001)
* For Medical Journals, a New World Online (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Mar. 20, 2001)
* PERSONAL HEALTH: Finding Tea's Place on a Healthful Table (By JANE E. BRODY, Mar. 20, 2001)
Stress May Negate Physical Activity on Job (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 20, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / REGIMENS: Clot Drugs? Check. Diet Advice? Check. (By JOHN O'NEIL, Mar. 20, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / TESTING: Drug Attacks Tics From Tourette's (By JOHN O'NEIL, Mar. 20, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / BEHAVIOR: Acting on Impulse, Again and Again (By JOHN O'NEIL, Mar. 20, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / TREATMENTS: For Men's Hearts, a Breast Cancer Drug (By JOHN O'NEIL, Mar. 20, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / MEASUREMENTS: More Interaction, More Weight Loss (By JOHN O'NEIL, Mar. 20, 2001)
* Q&A: Lurking Germs (By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, Mar. 20, 2001)

Monday, March 19, 2001:
On This Day: March 19 (Johannes Magnus 3/19/1488-3/22/1544, Alonso Cano 3/19/1601-9/3/1667, Nikolay Gogol 3/19/1809-2/21/1852, David Livingstone 3/19/1813-5/1/1873, Sir Richard Burton 3/19/1821-10/20/1890, Wyatt Earp 3/19/1848-1/13/1929, William Jennings Bryan 3/19/1860-7/26/1925, James Van Fleet 3/19/1892-9/23/1992, Brent Scowcroft 1925, Patrick McGoohan 1928, Hans Kung 1928, Philip Roth 1933, Phyllis Newman 1935, Ursula Andress 1936, Ruth Pointer 1946, Glenn Close 1947)
Senate Defeats Treaty, Vote 49 to 35; Orders it Returned to the President
(NY TIMES, March 19, 1920)
Earl Warren, 83, Who Led High Court In Time of Vast Social Change, Is Dead
[3/19/1891-7/9/1974] (By ALDEN WHITMAN, July 10, 1974)
John Phillips, a 'Papa' of the 1960's Group, Dies at 65 (By NEIL STRAUSS, Mar. 19, 2001)
Abraham H. Lass, Educator, Writer and Passionate Principal, Dies at 93 (By ROBERT D. McFADDEN, Mar. 19, 2001)
Peggy Converse, Actress Who Performed on Hundreds of Stages, Dies at 95 (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Mar. 19, 2001)
Wendy Carol Roth, Author and Advocate for the Disabled, Dies at 48 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Mar. 19, 2001)
Internet Filters Used to Shield Minors Censor Speech, Critics Say (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Mar. 19, 2001)
Washington Memo: For Bush, a Chronicle of Bad News Foretold (By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM, Mar. 19, 2001)
Congress Struggles With Flood of E-Mail (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 19, 2001)
Bush Is Due to Meet Chinese on Issues Crucial for Ties (By MICHAEL R. GORDON, Mar. 19, 2001)
Beijing Journal: Hiding From Police is a Dog's Life (By ERIK ECKHOLM, Mar. 19, 2001)
As a Russian Hurries Home, Washington Is Suspicious (By JAMES RISEN, Mar. 19, 2001)
Taliban Explains Buddha Demolition (By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Mar. 19, 2001)
Socialist Wins Final Round in Race for Mayor of Paris (By SUZANNE DALEY, Mar. 19, 2001)
Metropolitan Diary (By ENID NEMY, Mar. 19, 2001)
In Suburbs, They're Cracking Down on the Joneses (By LISA W. FODERARO, Mar. 19, 2001)
City's Population Changes Are on Vivid Display in Queens (By DEAN E. MURPHY, Mar. 19, 2001)
Where Affection Is Peddled by the Drink, Lonely Immigrants Provide a Market (By CHRIS HEDGES, Mar. 19, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Reviving the Japanese Economy (NY TIMES, Mar. 19, 2001)
* OP-ED: The Scientist's Story (By WILLIAM PRUSOFF, Mar. 19, 2001)
* OP-ED ESSAY: 'Little Jemmy' (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Mar. 19, 2001)
OP-ED: The True Oscars (By ANDY BOROWITZ, Mar. 19, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: A Way to Find the Bad Cops (By BOB HERBERT, Mar. 19, 2001)
* LETTERS: Broken Buddhas and Glass Houses (By WILLIS HARTE et. al., Mar. 19, 2001)
BUSINESS: Plunge in Stocks Colors Debate on Size of Fed Rate Cut (By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Mar. 19, 2001)
Companies Turn to Grades, and Employees Go to Court (By REED ABELSON, Mar. 19, 2001)
Big Media v. Freelancers: The Justices at the Digital Divide
(By FELICITY BARRINGER and RALPH BLUMENTHAL, Mar. 19, 2001)
Market Place: Despite Soaring Profits, Ciena Is Tarred by Nasdaq Brush (By BARNABY J. FEDER, Mar. 19, 2001)
Advertising: Agencies to Try to Reach Fast-Growing Ethnic Population (By STUART ELLIOTT, Mar. 19, 2001)
* In Search of Buying Opportunities (By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, Mar. 19, 2001)
New Economy: Challenges More Daunting Than Song-Swapping (By TIM RACE, Mar. 19, 2001)
* E-Commerce Report: Taking Customer Service Seriously (By BOB TEDESCHI, Mar. 19, 2001)
Intel Is Set to Introduce Advanced Chips for Laptops (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Mar. 19, 2001)
* Publisher's Web Books Spur Hardcover Sales (By PAMELA LiCALZI O'CONNELL, Mar. 19, 2001)
Media Talk: AOL Sees a Different Side of Time Warner [Ted Turner] (By JIM RUTENBERG, Mar. 19, 2001)
Media Talk: New Scientific American Draws Criticism (By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Mar. 19, 2001)
Media Talk: 'Nightline' to Devote a Full Week to Drugs (By JAMES BARRON, Mar. 19, 2001)
* Compressed Data: Shoulders Shrugged Over Dot-Com Woes (By SAUL HANSELL, Mar. 19, 2001)
* Compressed Data: A Site Dedicated to Gorbachev (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Mar. 19, 2001)
* Patents: No Claims on Amazon's 'One-Click' Shopping Device (By SABRA CHARTRAND, Mar. 19, 2001)
* Alternatives Sought for Broadband (By SIMON ROMERO, Mar. 19, 2001)
NBC Seeks Innovation in Prime Time (By BILL CARTER, Mar. 19, 2001)
ARTS: Sculpture Center Plans to Move, Shedding Students and Studios (By CHRISTOPHER S. WREN, Mar. 19, 2001)
* ARTS ONLINE: Digital Art: Do You View It at Home or in Public? (By MATTHEW MIRAPAUL, Mar. 19, 2001)
BOOKS: After 10 Years With Hitler, a Biographer Declares His Liberation (By RALPH BLUMENTHAL, Mar. 19, 2001)
BOOKS: 'No Tears in Ireland': Sheltered From War in a Bleak Ireland (By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, Mar. 19, 2001)
Culture Notes: Spirit of France (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Mar. 19, 2001)
DANCE: Dance Review: An Antic Take on St. Patrick With Sexily Slinky Snakes (By JACK ANDERSON, Mar. 19, 2001)
DANCE: James Sewell Brings Stunning Surprises Amid Deft Moves (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Mar. 19, 2001)
DANCE: A Mark Morris Mix That's All His Own (By JENNIFER DUNNING, Mar. 19, 2001)
MUSIC: Boston Symphony Finds Fascination in the Familiar (By BERNARD HOLLAND, Mar. 19, 2001)
OPERA: 'Acis and Galatea': The Nymphs in Their Summer Dresses (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Mar. 19, 2001)
* THEATER: 'Cartas': A Soul's Torture Reverberates From 17th-Century Letters (By WILBORN HAMPTON, Mar. 19, 2001)
THEATER: 'Momma': Wabor Pains As Comedy? Now, Bweathe (By NEIL GENZLINGER, Mar. 19, 2001)
TV: 'First Years': Roommates in Law Jobs (By ANITA GATES, Mar. 19, 2001)
HEALTH: Study Cites Illness in Alumni of Schools on Industrial Sites (By JACQUES STEINBERG, Mar. 19, 2001)
Setback in Treatment for Parkinson's (By ANDREW POLLACK, Mar. 19, 2001)

Sunday, March 18, 2001:
On This Day: March 18 (Friedrich Nicolai 3/18/1733-1/8/1811, John C. Calhoun 3/18/1782-3/31/1850, Antonio Salviati 3/18/1816-1/25/1890, Rudolf Diesel 3/18/1858-9/29/1913, Neville Chamberlain 3/18/1869-11/9/1940, Chiang Ching-kuo 3/18/1910-1/13/1988, Peter Graves 1926, John Kander 1927, George Plimpton 1927, John Updike 1932, F.W. de Klerk 1936, Charley Pride 1938, Wilson Pickett 1941, Kevin Dobson 1943, Irene Cara 1959, Vanessa Williams 1963, Bonnie Blair 1964, Queen Latifah 1970)
Russian Floats in Space for 10 Minutes; Leaves Orbiting Craft With a Lifeline
(By Henry Tanner, March 18, 1965)
Grover Cleveland Dies at 71; only U.S. president who served two non-concurrent terms
[3/18/1837-6/24/1908] (NY TIMES, June 24, 1908)
Samuel Shapiro, Business Executive, Dies at 83 (NY TIMES, Mar. 18, 2001)
H. Gordon Skilling, Expert on Czechoslovakia, Dies at 89 (NY TIMES, Mar. 18, 2001)
The Great Alzana, Daring High Wire Artist, Dies at 82 [Feb. 16] (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Mar. 18, 2001)
Irina Bugrimova, Enchanter of Big Cats, Dies at 90 [Feb. 20] (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Mar. 18, 2001)
W. D. Hayes, World Leader in Aerodynamics, Dies at 82 (By RICHARD WITKIN, Mar. 18, 2001)
Gyula Obersovszky, Samizdat Star, Dies at 74 (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Mar. 18, 2001)
Abraham Lass, Passionate Principal and Writer, Dies at 93 (By ROBERT D. McFADDEN, Mar. 18, 2001)
Few Want to Be Seen With Image of Clinton (NY TIMES, Mar. 18, 2001)
Antiques Dealers Accused of Staging TV Appraisals (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 18, 2001)
An Inner-City Perspective on High School Violence (By EVELYN NIEVES, Mar. 18, 2001)
Police Talk to Dartmouth Suspects' Parents (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Mar. 18, 2001)
A Mad Scramble by Donors for Plum Ambassadorships (By MARC LACEY & RAYMOND BONNER, Mar. 18, 2001)
Colonel's Trial Puts Russian Justice to Test (By MICHAEL WINES, Mar. 18, 2001)
Awaiting a Transition, Japan Pushes for Openness (By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Mar. 18, 2001)
Suspect Sought in China Blasts; Death Toll Rises to 108 (By CRAIG S. SMITH, Mar. 18, 2001)
Inside the Arctic Circle, an Ancient People Emerge (By WARREN HOGE, Mar. 18, 2001)
NY REGION: Diversity Lags Behind Census (By MICHAEL COOPER, Mar. 18, 2001)
New York Celebrates the Deep Green Irish Soul (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Mar. 18, 2001)
The Ties That Bind New York to Wall St. (By LESLIE EATON, Mar. 18, 2001)
EDITORIAL OBSERVER: How the C.I.A.'s Judgments Were Distorted by Cold War Catechisms
(By PHILIP TAUBMAN, Mar. 18, 2001)
OP-ED: The American Risk in Japan (By JEFFREY E. GARTEN, Mar. 18, 2001)
OP-ED: Corporate Power in Overdrive (By ROBERT B. REICH, Mar. 18, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: The Money Pit (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Mar. 18, 2001)
LETTERS: Ms. Moffett's Lessons for Us All (By, Mar. 18, 2001)
LETTERS: Prisoners Defiled: A Chinese Furor (By SEYMOUR M. COHEN, M.D., Mar. 18, 2001)
Econ 2001: Tips for the Shellshocked (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Mar. 18, 2001)
CORRESPONDENCE/British Countryside: On Returning to a Green & Contagious Isle (By ALAN COWELL, Mar. 18, 2001)
No Pink Slip. You're Just Dot-Gone. (By SAM LUBELL, Mar. 18, 2001)
Taliban: War for War's Sake (By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Mar. 18, 2001)
Crowded, in Any Language (By CLYDE HABERMAN, Mar. 18, 2001)
Mad Dogs and 20-Year-Old Men (By, Mar. 18, 2001)
The Warp and Woof of Identity Politics for Pets (By PATRICIA LEIGH BROWN, Mar. 18, 2001)
* BUSINESS: Expert Advice: Focus on Profit (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Mar. 18, 2001)
* How Did They Value Stocks? Count the Absurd Ways (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Mar. 18, 2001)
* Market Watch: The Future Won't Be as Good as It Was (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Mar. 18, 2001)
* INVESTING: Caution is the Watchword as the Markets Gyrate (By DANNY HAKIM & RIVA D. ATLAS, Mar. 18, 2001)
* Lucent Layoffs Are New Hires to Other Technology Firms (By JAYSON BLAIR, Mar. 18, 2001)
Web Comes Up Fast on the Outside [Online Gambling] (By MARK LANDLER, Mar. 18, 2001)
* Preludes: Therapy for Dot-Com Survivors (By ABBY ELLIN, Mar. 18, 2001)
Wanted: Equal-Opportunity Executive Recruiter (By LISA SANDERS, Mar. 18, 2001)
Healing From Executive Trauma (By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH, Mar. 18, 2001)
* Economic View: 2 Prophets of Disaster See Trouble Once Again (By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Mar. 18, 2001)
The Right Thing: When Good Ethics Aren't Good Business (By JEFFREY L. SEGLIN, Mar. 18, 2001)
* Five Questions for John F. Welch Jr.: Dominate Markets, but Cast a Wide Net (By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH, Mar. 18, 2001)
Market Insight: Gauging the Outlook for