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)
Wednesday, October 31, 2001:
On This Day: October 31 (Jan Vermeer 10/31/1632-12/15/1675, John Keats 10/31/1795-2/23/1821,
Juliette Low 10/31/1860-1/18/1927, Michael Landon 10/31/1936-7/1/1991, Norodom Sihanouk 1922,
Michael Collins 1930, Dan Rather 1931, Sally Kirkland 1944, Deidre Hall 1948, Jane Pauley 1950)
Indira Gandhi Slain, Is Succeded by Son
(By WILLIAM K. STEVENS, October 31, 1984)
Chiang Kai-shek: A Leader Who Was Thrust Aside by Revolution
[10/31/1887-4/5/1975] (By ALDEN WHITMAN, April 6, 1975)
Paul C. Warnke, Johnson Pentagon Official Who Questioned Vietnam War, Dies
(By MICHAEL T. KAUFMAN, Oct. 31, 2001)
Laszlo Halasz, First Director of City Opera, Dies at 96
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Oct. 31, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: Alert Said to Be Tied in Part to Monitoring of Al Qaeda
(By PHILIP SHENON & DON VAN NATTA Jr., Oct. 31, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Walking a Wary Line
(By TODD S. PURDUM, Oct. 31, 2001)
THE DISEASE: Excruciating Lessons in the Ways of a Disease
(By William J. Broad et. al., Oct. 31, 2001)
THE DASCHLE LETTER: The Odyssey of an Anthrax-Tainted Envelope and a Trail of Death and Illness
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Oct. 31, 2001)
EATING WELL: A Vulnerable Food Supply, a Call for More Safety
(By MARIAN BURROS, Oct. 31, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: A Deeper Anthrax Mystery, an Ashcroft Alert, G.I.'s on the Ground
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Oct. 31, 2001)
THE MILITARY: Special Forces, on the Ground, Aid the Rebels
(By JAMES DAO & THOM SHANKER, Oct. 31, 2001)
STRATEGY: U.S. Campaign on a Second Front: Public Opinion
(By MICHAEL R. GORDON & ERIC SCHMITT, Oct. 31, 2001)
* NEWS ANALYSIS: Afghanistan as Vietnam
(By R. W. APPLE Jr., Oct. 31, 2001)
THE INQUIRY: Britain Charges Man in Death of the Afghan Rebel Leader
(By WARREN HOGE, Oct. 31, 2001)
NY REGION: THE NEW CASE: Hospital Worker's Illness Suggests Widening Threat
(By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Oct. 31, 2001)
NEW JERSEY: More Questions Than Answers in Contaminated Letters From Trenton
(By ERIC LIPTON, Oct. 31, 2001)
THE HOSPITAL: Confusion and Anxiety, and Plenty of Antibiotics
(By KATHERINE E. FINKELSTEIN, Oct. 31, 2001)
THE SEARCH: Hunting a Deadly Germ by Scrutinizing a Life
(By DAN BARRY, Oct. 31, 2001)
SECURITY: Precautions Turn House That Ruth Built Into the Fortress That Bush Visited
(By AL BAKER, Oct. 31, 2001)
AN APPRECIATION: From 'Short Porch' to Top Tier, It's History
(By BRUCE WEBER, Oct. 31, 2001)
SPORTS: Is This the Last Game in Pinstripes for El Duque?
(By GEORGE VECSEY, Oct. 31, 2001)
YANKEES 2, DIAMONDBACKS 1: Clemens Gets Crucial Game 3 Win
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 31, 2001)
President Warms Up, Then Throws a Strike
(By BUSTER OLNEY, Oct. 31, 2001)
* ON BASEBALL: For Old-Timers, Two Days' Rest Could Be Enough
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 31, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Life in a Time of Terror
(NY TIMES, Oct. 31, 2001)
EDITORIAL: All Hallows Eve, 2001
(NY TIMES, Oct. 31, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: These Spooky Times
(By MAUREEN DOWD, Oct. 31, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: The One-Eyed Man
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, Oct. 31, 2001)
OP-ED: The Saudi-U.S. Rift
(By ALWALEED BIN TALALBIN ABDUL AZIZ ALSAUD, Oct. 31, 2001)
LETTERS: For Truth, Not Spin, on Anthrax
(By BERNARD GUYER, M.D. et. al., Oct. 31, 2001)
BUSINESS: Stocks Tumble, Spurred by Dive in Consumer Confidence
[Dow -148, Nasdaq -32] (By SHERRI DAY, Oct. 31, 2001)
Unemployment in Japan Now Exceeds Postwar Levels
(By KEN BELSON, Oct. 31, 2001)
Confidence In Economy Is at Its Lowest Since 1994
(By REUTERS, Oct. 31, 2001)
THE DRUG MAKERS: Industry Seeks U.S. Contracts to Develop Antibiotics
(By KEITH BRADSHER, Oct. 31, 2001)
MANAGEMENT: Reassessment After the Unthinkable Happens
(By JOBERT E. ABUEVA, Oct. 31, 2001)
THE BOSS: Stepping Out on My Own
(By DAVID L. STEWARD, Oct. 31, 2001)
WORKPLACE: Everyday People, Extraordinary Day
(By ANDREA GABOR, Oct. 31, 2001)
MY JOB: I Give Booster Shots for Careers
(By NANCY FRIEDBERG, Oct. 31, 2001)
* Direct-Mail Marketers Tackle Issue of Security
(By JOHN W. FOUNTAIN, Oct. 31, 2001)
ADVERTISING: Just How Safe Is That Catalog in Your Mailbox?
(By STUART ELLIOTT, Oct. 31, 2001)
THE SMALL AIRPORTS: Private Flights Are Halted Near Nuclear Installations
(By MATTHEW L. WALD, Oct. 31, 2001)
ARTS IN AMERICA: Tribute to New York From the Nation's Upper West Side
(By SAM HOWE VERHOVEK, Oct. 31, 2001)
ART: German Art Arrives in Its Bijou Museum
(By CAROL VOGEL, Oct. 31, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'THE COMPLETE LYRICS OF IRVING BERLIN': Not for Just an Hour, Not for Just a Day... but Always
(By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Oct. 31, 2001)
FILM: 'THE MAN WHO WASN'T THERE': A Barber Is Passive and Invisible, Then Ruinous and Glowing
(By A. O. SCOTT, Oct. 31, 2001)
Footlights: Lens on Cultures [Margaret Mead, Gertrude Stein]
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Oct. 31, 2001)
THEATER: 'DRAGAPELLA!': High Hair, High Camp and Four-Part High Anxiety
(By ANITA GATES, Oct. 31, 2001)
TV's Comforting Laugh Track
(By BERNARD WEINRAUB, Oct. 31, 2001)
Tuesday, October 30, 2001:
On This Day: October 30 (John Adams 10/30/1735-7/4/1826, Alfred Sisley 10/30/1839-1/29/1899,
Ezra Pound 10/30/1885-11/1/1972, Charles Atlas 10/30/1893-12/24/1972,
Dickinson W. Richards 10/30/1895-2/23/1973, Ruth Gordon 10/30/1896-8/28/1985,
Daniel Nathans 10/30/1928-11/16/1999, Louis Malle 10/30/1932-11/23/1995,
Claude Leloouch 1937, Henry Winkler 1945, Kevin Pollak 1958)
Ali Regains Title, Flooring Foreman
(By DAVE ANDERSON, October 30, 1974)
Fred W. Friendly, CBS Executive and Pioneer in TV News Coverage, Dies at 82
[10/30/1915-3/3/1998] (By ERIC PACE, March 5, 1998)
Elaine Dannheisser, 77, Art Collector, Dies
(By ROBERTA SMITH, Oct. 30, 2001)
* Larry Aldrich, Who Founded Art Museum, Dies at 95
(By JOHN RUSSELL, Oct. 30, 2001)
* Grigory Chukhrai, 80, Director Who Advanced Soviet Cinema
(By MICHAEL WINES, Oct. 30, 2001)
Eugene Jackson, 84, Actor Known for `Our Gang' Films
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 30, 2001)
Jacqueline Hudson, 91, Landscape Painter
(NY TIMES, Oct. 30, 2001)
THE ALERT: Ashcroft Warns of Terror Attacks Soon Against U.S.
(By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM & DAVID JOHNSTON, Oct. 30, 2001)
THE POLL: Survey Shows Doubts Stirring on Terror War
(By RICHARD L. BERKE & JANET ELDER, Oct. 30, 2001)
THE DETAINEES: Detentions After Attacks Pass 1,000, U.S. Says
(By NEIL A. LEWIS, Oct. 30, 2001)
THE PRESIDENT: Bush Announces a Crackdown on Visa Violators
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Oct. 30, 2001)
THE DISEASE: Spores Are Found in 4 More Federal Buildings
(By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM & MATTHEW L. WALD, Oct. 30, 2001)
FLORIDA CASES; Experts Are Troubled by Patients Who, Defying Odds and Advice, Stop Taking Cipro
(By DANA CANEDY, Oct. 30, 2001)
WHITE HOUSE SPOKESMAN: These Days, Press Secretary Toes a Narrower Line
(By ALESSANDRA STANLEY, Oct. 30, 2001)
* A City Dweller Chooses the Life of Religious Hermit
(By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, Oct. 30, 2001)
THE MILITARY: Material Seized in U.S. Ground Raid Yields Few Gains
(By STEVEN LEE MYERS & ERIC SCHMITT, Oct. 30, 2001)
COLLABORATION: 3 New Allies Help C.I.A. in Its Fight Against Terror
(By JAMES RISEN and TIM WEINER, Oct. 30, 2001)
FRONT LINE: Taliban Foes Mobilizing, Possible Sign Of Offensive
(By DAVID ROHDE, Oct. 30, 2001)
Escaping Afghanistan, Children Pay Price
(By BARRY BEARAK, Oct. 30, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: A New Terror Warning, a New Poll, a New Agency's First Meeting
(By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Oct. 30, 2001)
NEW YORK REGION: Possible Anthrax Case Shuts a New York Hospital
(By STEVEN GREENHOUSE & ERIC LIPTON, Oct. 30, 2001)
Sept. 11 Exacts an Economic Toll From the Hospitals of New York
(By KATHERINE E. FINKELSTEIN, Oct. 30, 2001)
BOLDFACE NAMES: Helping the Home Planet [Leonard Nimoy helps Thalia theater]
(By JAMES BARRON, Oct. 30, 2001)
TUNNEL VISION: Welcomed: The Never and the Rarely [Subway lines N & R]
(By RANDY KENNEDY, Oct. 30, 2001)
EDITORIAL OBSERVER: The Not-Yet-Ready-for-Prime-Time Novelist
(By VERLYN KLINKENBORG, Oct. 30, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Drilling for Tolerance
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Oct. 30, 2001)
OP-ED: AT HOME ABROAD/ABROAD AT HOME: Is There an Answer?
(By ANTHONY LEWIS, Oct. 30, 2001)
OP-ED: Small Office, Wide Authority
(By ERNEST R. MAY, Oct. 30, 2001)
OP-ED: Frightening News
(By DANIEL HANDLER, Oct. 30, 2001)
LETTERS: In Afghanistan, the Fog of War
(By LUDMILLA THORNE et. al., Oct. 30, 2001)
LETTERS: Violence and Justice
(By Rev. TOM REIBER, Oct. 30, 2001)
LETTERS: History Lessons
(By CHRISTOPHER MILLER, Oct. 30, 2001)
* THE MARKETS: Major Gauges Drop Sharply as Investors Take Profits
[Dow -276, Nasdaq -69] (By SHERRI DAY, Oct. 30, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Look, Up in the Sky! Big Bets on a Big Deal
(By SETH SCHIESEL, Oct. 30, 2001)
Merrill Alters Pay of Brokers in Effort to Court Wealthy as Clients
(By PATRICK McGEEHAN, Oct. 30, 2001)
THE MEDICAL STOCKPILE: Concerns About How Quickly the U.S. Can Deliver Drugs
(By REED ABELSON & ROBERT PEAR, Oct. 30, 2001)
THE DRUG MAKER: A Painful Misadventure for a Friend of America [Bayer]
(By KEITH BRADSHER, Oct. 30, 2001)
Prices Dip for Market Seat [1366 seats; $2.2 million; -4.5% from 10/18]
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Oct. 30, 2001)
ARTS: AN APPRAISAL: A Crystal Beacon Atop a 20's Curiosity
(By HERBERT MUSCHAMP, Oct. 30, 2001)
ART: PULITZER FOUNDATION FOR THE ARTS: An Unmuseum Guaranteed to Be Uncrowded
(By JOHN RUSSELL, Oct. 30, 2001)
BALLET: 'CLEAR': Seven Men and One Woman Equal Explosion
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Oct. 30, 2001)
BALLET: 'DIM LUSTRE': From Edwardian Intrigue to Wild West Antics
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, Oct. 30, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'COLLECTED STORIES': Saul Bellow's Collection of Most Unusual Suspects
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Oct. 30, 2001)
MUSIC CRITIC: What Boston Job Means to Levine's Musical Legacy
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Oct. 30, 2001)
MUSIC: MONTREAL SYMPHONY: Turning the Unexpected to Lyrical Good Use
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Oct. 30, 2001)
OPERA: 'RITORNO D'ULISSE IN PATRIA': Penelope, Only One Person Could Describe That Bed
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Oct. 30, 2001)
* SCIENCE: How Islam Won, and Lost, the Lead in Science
(By DENNIS OVERBYE, Oct. 30, 2001)
* Some Archaeological Digs in New Hot Spots May Wait [Asian bull]
(By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Oct. 30, 2001)
* Particles Are Tiny, but Damage Can Be Great
(By JAMES GLANZ, Oct. 30, 2001)
* Veiled Messages of Terrorists May Lurk in Cyberspace
(By GINA KOLATA, Oct. 30, 2001)
CONVERSATION WITH JOHN MCWHORTER: How Language Came to Be, and Change
(By CLAUDIA DREIFUS, Oct. 30, 2001)
Briefly Empty Skies Offer Climate Clues
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Oct. 30, 2001)
OBSERVATORY: Gamblers Aid Science
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Oct. 30, 2001)
* Q & A: Travels With an Ant
(By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, Oct. 30, 2001)
SCIENTIST AT WORK / DAVID COSTILL: A Career Spent in Study of Training and Exercise
(By GINA KOLATA, Oct. 30, 2001)
HEALTH: Study Finds Inaccurate Labels on Health Bars
(By JULIAN E. BARNES, Oct. 30, 2001)
* VITAL SIGNS: Perceptions: The Education of the Subconscious
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Oct. 30, 2001)
At Risk: Measure of Calm May Help Fight AIDS
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Oct. 30, 2001)
Consequences: The Risks of the Long-Distance Runner
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Oct. 30, 2001)
Monday, October 29, 2001:
On This Day: October 29 (William Hayley 10/29/1745-11/12/1820, Fred Lazarus Jr. 10/29/1884-5/27/1973,
Richard Dreyfuss 1947, Kate Jackson 1948)
BLACK TUESDAY: STOCKS COLLAPSE IN 16,410,030-SHARE DAY
(NY Times, October 29, 1929)
Fanny Brice, Comedienne, Dies at the Age of 59
[born 10/29/1891-5/29/1951] (NY Times, May 30, 1951)
Vasily Mishin Dies at 84; Led Soviet Race to Moon
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Oct. 29, 2001)
Herbert Weissenstein, Adviser to an Assortment of Arts Groups, Dies at 56
(By JAMES R. OESTREICH, Oct. 29, 2001)
George Solomon Dies at 69; Linked Stress to Immunity and Disease
(By CARMEL McCOUBREY, Oct. 29, 2001)
Joan Ellenbogen, a Bar Association Founder, Dies at 59
(NY TIMES, Oct. 29, 2001)
Dr. Alvan Feinstein, 75, Innovator in Diagnoses, Dies
(By ANAHAD O'CONNOR, Oct. 29, 2001)
THE DISEASE: Anthrax Found in Mail Worker in New Jersey
(By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, Oct. 29, 2001)
THE RESPONSE: San Jose Emergency Plans Set Example
(By EVELYN NIEVES, Oct. 29, 2001)
AMERICAN MUSLIMS: Organizations Call for End to Bombing
(By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, Oct. 29, 2001)
AIR QUALITY: Design of Newer Buildings Reduces Bioterrorism Risk
(By JAMES GLANZ, Oct. 29, 2001)
Anthrax Hides Along Cattle Trails of the Old West
(By ROSS E. MILLOY, Oct. 29, 2001)
THE MOOD: A Family, Both Arab and Arab-American, Divided by a War
(By SUSAN SACHS with BLAINE HARDEN, Oct. 29, 2001)
THE BOMBING: U.S. Planes Hit Taliban Positions Threatening Rebels
(By THOM SHANKER with DEXTER FILKINS, Oct. 29, 2001)
THE SPIES: Pakistani Intelligence Had Links to Al Qaeda, U.S. Officials Say
(By JAMES RISEN & JUDITH MILLER, Oct. 29, 2001)
THE GUERRILLAS: Slain Taliban Foe Is Buried. So They Say.
(By BARRY BEARAK, Oct. 29, 2001)
LIVING ABROAD: Americans Overseas Feel They're in High Profile
(By Ginger Thompson, Oct. 29, 2001)
THE ALLIANCE: Rebel Alliance Is Frustrated by U.S. Raids
(By DAVID ROHDE, Oct. 29, 2001)
METROPOLITAN DIARY: Dear Diary
(By ENID NEMY, Oct. 29, 2001)
IMMIGRATION: Refugees at America's Door Find It Closed After Attacks
(By SOMINI SENGUPTA, Oct. 29, 2001)
THE FAMILIES: Hugs, Whispered Memories and Pained What Ifs
(By ELISSA GOOTMAN, Oct. 29, 2001)
THE MEMORIAL SERVICE: Feelings of Loss and the Sound of Silence Greet Families at the Site
(By SHAILA K. DEWAN, Oct. 29, 2001)
SPORTS: DIAMONDBACKS 4, YANKEES 0: Johnson Sends Yankees Staggering Home
(By BUSTER OLNEY, Oct. 29, 2001)
ON BASEBALL: When Pettitte Starts, His Father Is at Risk
(By JACK CURRY, Oct. 29, 2001)
ON BASEBALL: Performance Brings Gibson to Mind
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 29, 2001)
Williams Silences the Boos With One Swing
(By TYLER KEPNER, Oct. 29, 2001)
SPORTS: Focusing on the Ring, Not Trophies
(By WILLIAM C. RHODEN, Oct. 29, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: Shame in the House
(By BOB HERBERT, Oct. 29, 2001)
OP-ED ESSAY: An Optimist's What-If
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Oct. 29, 2001)
OP-ED: A Dangerous Appetite for Oil
(By ROB NIXON, Oct. 29, 2001)
OP-ED: To Catch a Terrorist
(By ANDY BOROWITZ, Oct. 29, 2001)
LETTERS: Ground Zero, a Place for Pilgrims
(By HERBERT ALLEN et. al., Oct. 29, 2001)
LETTERS: Editing the Towers
(By BEN STILLER, Oct. 29, 2001)
BUSINESS: G.M. Agrees to Sell Its Satellite TV Unit in $26 Billion Deal
(By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN & SETH SCHIESEL, Oct. 29, 2001)
* NEW ECONOMY: Page by Page History of the Web
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Oct. 29, 2001)
* E-COMMERCE REPORT: Interest Surges in E-Mail Marketing
(By BOB TEDESCHI, Oct. 29, 2001)
* A Year Only, Then Off the Best-Seller List at Barnes & Noble
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Oct. 29, 2001)
At MSNBC, a Young Anchor for Younger Viewers
(By, Oct. 29, 2001)
AOL Gains Cable Rights in China by Omitting News, Sex and Violence
(By MARK LANDLER, Oct. 29, 2001)
COMPRESSED DATA: Less Information Technology Spending Seen
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, Oct. 29, 2001)
In Pensive Times, Comfort Magazines Find an Audience
(By DAVID HANDELMAN, Oct. 29, 2001)
PATENTS: A Haven From Bioterrorism
(By TERESA RIORDAN, Oct. 29, 2001)
DRILLING DOWN: Most Schools Are Wired
(By SUSAN STELLIN, Oct. 29, 2001)
* ARTS ONLINE: Elegies and Tone Poems Respond to Tragedy
(By MATTHEW MIRAPAUL, Oct. 29, 2001)
BOOKS: 'Oprah' Gaffe by Jonathan Franzen Draws Ire and Sales
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Oct. 29, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'MOVIE LOVE IN THE 50'S': When the Movies Moved to the Suburbs
(By JANET MASLIN, Oct. 29, 2001)
MUSIC: It's Official: Levine to Lead the Boston Symphony
(By RALPH BLUMENTHAL, Oct. 29, 2001)
TV CRITIC: Some TV Series Rush to Take Note of the Sept. 11 Attacks
(By CARYN JAMES, Oct. 29, 2001)
TV: 'A HISTORY OF BRITAIN': Bloody Wars of Religion
(By JULIE SALAMON, Oct. 29, 2001)
Sunday, October 28, 2001:
On This Day: October 28 (Henry III 10/28/1017-10/5/1056, Eliphalet Remington 10/28/1793-8/12/1861,
Gilbert Grosvenor 10/28/1875-2/4/1966, Edith Head 10/28/1897-10/24/1981, Evelyn Waugh 10/28/1903-4/10/1966,
Francis Bacon 10/28/1909-4/28/1992, Suzy Parker 1933, Bruce Jenner 1949, Julia Roberts 1967)
Statue of Liberty Dedicated in New York Harbor by President Cleveland
(NY Times, October 28, 1886)
Dr. Jonas Salk, Whose Vaccine Turned Tide on Polio, Dies at 80
[10/28/1914-6/23/1995] (By HAROLD M. SCHMECK Jr., June 24, 1995)
Marvin Harris, 74, Is Dead; Professor Was Iconoclast of Anthropologists
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Oct. 28, 2001)
Ernest A. Lindner, 79, Dies; Preserved Many Antique Presses
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Oct. 28, 2001)
Diana van der Vlis, Stage and Screen Actress, Dies at 66
(By JESSE McKINLEY, Oct. 28, 2001)
THE OVERVIEW: Workers at House Offices Begin Anthrax Treatment
(By TODD S. PURDUM, Oct. 28, 2001)
Jubilant Calls on Sept. 11 Led to F.B.I. Arrests
(By NEIL A. LEWIS and DAVID JOHNSTON, Oct. 28, 2001)
LAW ENFORCEMENT: Focus on Terror Creates Burden for the Police
(By KEVIN SACK, Oct. 28, 2001)
* FLOW OF INFORMATION: Government Clamps Down on Agency Web Sites
(By ROBIN TONER, Oct. 28, 2001)
Overdoses of Painkiller Are Linked to 282 Deaths
(By BARRY MEIER, Oct. 28, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Reconciling the Demands of War and the Market
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Oct. 28, 2001)
Cal Tech Gets $600 Million, a Record Gift
(By JAMES STERNGOLD, Oct. 28, 2001)
Intel Founder Gives $600 Million to Caltech [Gordon Moore]
(NY TIMES, Oct. 28, 2001)
* THE RESPONSE: Authorities Discover How Little They Know
(By GINA KOLATA, Oct. 28, 2001)
* THE FEARS: Lessons From Abroad on Dealing With Anxiety
(By ERICA GOODE, Oct. 28, 2001)
THE VICTIM: Postal Worker Felled by Anthrax Is Remembered
(By ELIZABETH BECKER, Oct. 28, 2001)
THE TECHNOLOGY: Developing Warning System for Biological Attack Proves Difficult
(By KENNETH CHANG & ANDREW POLLACK, Oct. 28, 2001)
POLITICAL BRIEFING: A Talkative Gore Is Quiet on '04 Plans
(By B. DRUMMOND AYRES JR, Oct. 28, 2001)
THE CLERIC: Muslim Leader Who Was Once Labeled an Alarmist Is Suddenly a Sage
(By LAURIE GOODSTEIN, Oct. 28, 2001)
AMERICAN JOURNAL: Soviet Defector Works to Defend Against Weapons He Helped Design
(By FRANCIS X. CLINES, Oct. 28, 2001)
Allies Preparing for Long Fight as Taliban Dig In
(By MICHAEL R. GORDON, Oct. 28, 2001)
POLICE WORK: A Glimpse Behind the Plot Against the American Embassy in Paris
(By CHRIS HEDGES, Oct. 28, 2001)
Waging a Deadly Stalemate on Afghanistan's Front Line
(By DAVID ROHDE, Oct. 28, 2001)
THE RELATIVES: Bin Laden Family Strives to Re-establish Its Reputation
(By MICHAEL MOSS, Oct. 28, 2001)
THE REBELS: Another Taliban Foe's Fate in Doubt
(By JANE PERLEZ, Oct. 28, 2001)
IN PAKISTAN: Seeking Miracles in a Place of Cruelty and Beauty
(By RICK BRAGG, Oct. 28, 2001)
THE BOMBINGS: U.S. Raids on Taliban Troops the Heaviest Yet
(By ERIC SCHMITT with DAVID ROHDE, Oct. 28, 2001)
THE SLAIN LEADER: Who Betrayed Haq? Candidates Are Many
(By BARRY BEARAK, Oct. 28, 2001)
SECURITY COUNCIL: Afghan Adviser: The Country's in His Blood
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Oct. 28, 2001)
PROPAGANDA: U.S. Appears to Be Losing Public Relations War So Far
(By SUSAN SACHS, Oct. 28, 2001)
THE JIHAD: Captured Terrorist Manual Suggests Hijackers Did a Lot by the Book
(By BENJAMIN WEISER, Oct. 28, 2001)
NY REGION: TStill on Edge, New York Is Rattled by a Quake [2.6]
(By N. R. KLEINFIELD, Oct. 28, 2001)
THE SITES: Anthrax Closes a 3rd New Jersey Post Office
(By N. R. KLEINFIELD, Oct. 28, 2001)
MUSLIMS IN AMERICA: Moderates Start Speaking Out Against Islamic Intolerance
(By DANIEL J. WAKIN, Oct. 28, 2001)
In City Primed to Hate Yankees, the Ground Zero Workers Demur
(By ALAN FEUER, Oct. 28, 2001)
OUR TOWNS: After Too Many Funerals, a Priest Could Use a Blessing
(By MICHAEL WINERIP, Oct. 28, 2001)
ON BASEBALL: Mistakes Turned Opener Into a Total Loss
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 28, 2001)
SPORTS: Yankees Go Up Against Their Storied Legacy
(By WILLIAM C. RHODEN, Oct. 28, 2001)
ON BASEBALL: Brenly Might Shuffle His Aces
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 28, 2001)
ON BASEBALL: Beyond Schilling and Johnson, There Are Doubts
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 28, 2001)
BASEBALL NOTEBOOK: McGwire Pushes Himself to Career Crossroad
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 28, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: Can Bush Bushkazi?
(By MAUREEN DOWD, Oct. 28, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: Taking Care of Business
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, Oct. 28, 2001)
OP-ED: Can Democrats Still Play the Game?
(By JEFFREY TOOBIN, Oct. 28, 2001)
LETTERS: That Aching Void in Our Heart
(By REBECCA GASTER et. al., Oct. 28, 2001)
BUSINESS: This Mr. Sunshine Sees More Rain
(By ALEX BERENSON, Oct. 28, 2001)
Value Funds: A New Profit Engine
(By ELIZABETH HARRIS, Oct. 28, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: An Economic Stimulus Bill With Corporations in Mind
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Oct. 28, 2001)
Firm Missing $105 Million and Executives After Attacks [First Equity Enterprises]
(By DAVID CAY JOHNSTON with WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM, Oct. 28, 2001)
The Precipitous Fall From Grace of a Top Wall Street Trader
(By LESLIE WAYNE, Oct. 28, 2001)
THE QUICK DOLLAR: Anthrax Brings Profiteers Out in Force
(By LESLIE KAUFMAN & CONSTANCE L. HAYS, Oct. 28, 2001)
Anthrax Slows the Mail and the Paying of Bills
(By RIVA D. ATLAS, Oct. 28, 2001)
For Trade Protesters, 'Slower, Sadder Songs'
(By LESLIE WAYNE, Oct. 28, 2001)
THE VACCINES: Rush for New Drugs Raises Questions About Testing
(By ANDREW POLLACK, Oct. 28, 2001)
* ARTS: Power, Imagination and New York's Future
(By HERBERT MUSCHAMP, Oct. 28, 2001)
ART: Married to Each Other, to Art and to Art History
(By MIA FINEMAN, Oct. 28, 2001)
ARTS: When Horror Can Be Healthy
(By MILES UNGER, Oct. 28, 2001)
ART: An Outpost of the Eastern Art in the West
(By RITA REIF, Oct. 28, 2001)
DANCE: A Dance Turns Darker, Its Maker More American
(By WENDY PERRON, Oct. 28, 2001)
FILM: Stories of Ghosts Who Infest the Living
(By KRISTIN HOHENADEL, Oct. 28, 2001)
FILM: Richard Kelly: Brought Up on Spielberg and Other Old Masters
(By AMY TAUBIN, Oct. 28, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY: Sophie Ristelhueber: A Photographer Specializes in Ravaged Leftovers of Humanity
(By AMY SERAFIN, Oct. 28, 2001)
THEATER: 'The Square': Annals of Asia in America, in Small Bites
(By MICHELLE MEMRAN, Oct. 28, 2001)
THEATER: An Art for the Ailing; That Is, for Everyone
(By JOHN FREEDMAN, Oct. 28, 2001)
TV: The Games People Played in a Simpler Time
(By TERRY TEACHOUT, Oct. 28, 2001)
* IDEAS AND TRENDS: It's Been Dark Before
(By DAVID M. KENNEDY, Oct. 28, 2001)
* IN TIME OF WAR: Once Again, Patriotic Themes Ring True as Art
(By DEBORAH SOLOMON, Oct. 28, 2001)
No Day Too Holy: War Rarely Pauses
(By DANIEL J. WAKIN, Oct. 28, 2001)
THE TRUTH HURTS: Efforts to Calm the Nation's Fears Spin Out of Control
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Oct. 28, 2001)
* TRAVEL: Centers of Solace for the Self
(By JAN BENZEL, Oct. 28, 2001)
WINTER IN THE SUN: Quiet Havens in a Blue Sea
(By FRANCES FRANK MARCUS, Oct. 28, 2001)
SUNDAY MAGAZINE: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 28, 2001)
* ON LANGUAGE: The New Location Locution
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Oct. 28, 2001)
* Questions for V.S. Naipaul on His Contentious Relationship to Islam
(By ADAM SHATZ, Oct. 28, 2001)
Fragmented We Stand
(By RICHARD TODD, Oct. 28, 2001)
THE ETHICIST: Up the Amazon
(By RANDY COHEN, Oct. 28, 2001)
EXPERT OPINION: Consumer Confidence
(By ROBB MANDELBAUM, Oct. 28, 2001)
ENCOUNTER: Hyphenated Americans
(By MATT BAI, Oct. 28, 2001)
All Suicide Bombers Are Not Alike
(By JOSEPH LELYVELD, Oct. 28, 2001)
Aaron Sorkin Works His Way Through the Crisis
(By PETER DE JONGE, Oct. 28, 2001)
* Oh, What a Miserable Mornin' [Richard Rodgers]
(By FRANK RICH, Oct. 28, 2001)
Saturday, October 27, 2001:
On This Day: October 27 (Catherine of Valois 10/27/1401-1/3/1437, Desiderius Erasmus 10/27/1466-7/12/1536,
James Cook 10/27/1728-2/14/1779, Niccolo Paganini 10/27/1782-5/27/1840, Isaac M. Singer 10/27/1811-7/23/1875,
Marcellin Berthelot 10/27/1827-3/18/1907, Theodore Roosevelt 10/27/1858-1/6/1919, Dylan Thomas 10/27/1914-11/9/1953, Roy Liechtenstein 10/27/1923-9/29/1997,
Teresa Wright 1918, Ralph Kiner 1922, Warren Christopher 1925)
IRT SUBWAY OPEN, 150,000 TRY IT
(NY Times, October 27, 1904)
Sylvia Plath: Her Poetry, Not Her Death, Is Her Triumph
[born 10/27/1932-2/11/1963] (By ROSALYN DREXLER, January 13, 1974)
Gerald Solomon, Is Dead at 71; Spurred Conservative Causes in House
(By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS, Oct. 27, 2001)
* Ferris Fain, A.L. Batting Champion in 1950's, Dies at 80
(By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Oct. 27, 2001)
Ismat Kittani, Kurdish Diplomat, Dies at 72
(By PAUL LEWIS, Oct. 27, 2001)
Piero Corsini, Old Masters Dealer, Dead at 63
(NY TIMES, Oct. 27, 2001)
Pat Ast, 59, Film Actress
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 27, 2001)
THE FLORIDA CASES: Workers Being Kept on Cipro After Tests Prove Inconclusive
(By DANA CANEDY, Oct. 27, 2001)
THE NEWS MEDIA: Two Networks Get No Reply to Questions for bin Laden
(By BILL CARTER, Oct. 27, 2001)
THE PREVENTION: U.S. Moves Toward Making Anthrax Vaccine Available
(By NICHOLAS WADE, Oct. 27, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: Agents Start Digging Up Old Files on Hoaxes
(By DAVID JOHNSTON, Oct. 27, 2001)
BUSINESS: Rally in Shares of Military Companies Lifts Blue Chips
[Dow +82, Nasdaq -7] (NY TIMES, Oct. 27, 2001)
Lockheed Wins $200 Billion Deal for Fighter Jet
(By JAMES DAO with LAURA M. HOLSON, Oct. 27, 2001)
JDS Uniphase Chief Looks for an Upturn
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Oct. 27, 2001)
Friday, October 26, 2001:
On This Day: October 26 (Domenico Scarlatti 10/26/1685-7/23/1757,
Georges Jacques Danton 10/26/1759-4/5/1794, Beryl Markham 10/26/1902-8/3/1986,
Jackie Coogan 10/26/1914-3/1/1984, Pat Sajak 1946, Hillary Rodham Clinton 1947, Jaclyn Smith 1947)
Israel Prime Minister Rabin and Jordan Prime Minister Majali Signed Peace Treaty
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Oct. 26, 1994)
Mahalia Jackson, Gospel Singer, And a Civil Rights Symbol, Dies
[born 10/26/1911] (By ALDEN WHITMAN, January 28, 1972)
Daniel Wildenstein, Head of Art-World Dynasty, Dies at 84
(By ALAN RIDING, Oct. 26, 2001)
Ken Aston, Soccer Referee Who Originated Red Card, Dies at 86
(By RAY CORMIER, Oct. 26, 2001)
Princess Soraya, Shah's Wife, Dies at 69
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 26, 2001)
THE DISEASE: Anthrax Traces Found at C.I.A. & Mail Center for High Court
(By DAVID STOUT, Oct. 26, 2001)
TRADE: On Smuggling Routes, There Are Good Taliban and Bad
(By DEXTER FILKINS, Oct. 26, 2001)
BUSINESS: Despite Dismal Economic News, Shares Post Solid Gains
[Dow +117, Nasdaq +44] (By MICHAEL BRICK, Oct. 26, 2001)
* Microsoft Introduces New Operating System [Windows XP]
(By STEVE LOHR, Oct. 26, 2001)
* Jupiter, an Internet Research Firm, Is Being Bought by NetRatings
(By SAUL HANSELL, Oct. 26, 2001)
COMPENSATION: Cantor Fitzgerald Starts Paying Bonuses to Families of Lost Workers
(By DIANA B. HENRIQUES, Oct. 26, 2001)
THE DRUG: Bayer Halves Price for Cipro, but Rivals Offer Drugs Free
(By KEITH BRADSHER, Oct. 26, 2001)
THE PILLS: Bayer Is Taken Aback by the Frenzy to Get Its Drug
(By EDMUND L. ANDREWS, Oct. 26, 2001)
PHARMACEUTICALS: Production of Smallpox Vaccine to Begin by Decemeber
(By MELODY PETERSEN, Oct. 26, 2001)
PLANNING: Few Hospitals Are Reading for a Surge of Bioterror Victims
(By MILT FREUDENHEIM, Oct. 26, 2001)
An Economy Keeping Its Guard Up
(By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH, Oct. 26, 2001)
Bin Laden Family Liquidates Holdings With Carlyle Group
(By KURT EICHENWALD, Oct. 26, 2001)
Pornography Takes Over Financial Site for Children
(By SUSAN STELLIN, Oct. 26, 2001)
Thursday, October 25, 2001:
On This Day: October 25 (Evariste Galois 10/25/1811-5/31/1832,
Johann Strauss, Jr. 10/25/1825-6/3/1899, Georges Bizet 10/25/1838-6/3/1875,
Henry Steele Commager 10/25/1902-3/2/1998, Minnie Pearl 10/25/1912-3/4/1996,
Bobby Thomson 1923, Helen Reddy 1941)
United Nations Admits Mainland China and Expels Taiwan
(By TAD SZULC, Oct. 25, 1971)
Picasso: Protean and Prodigious, the Greatest Single Force in 70 Years of Art
[born 10/25/1881] (By ALDEN WHITMAN, April 9, 1973)
José Vargas Martinez, Mexican Clown, Dies at 70
(NY TIMES, Oct. 25, 2001)
George Feyer, Cafe Pianist and Entertainer, Dies at 92
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Oct. 25, 2001)
Francis John Anscombe, 83, Mathematician and Professor, Is Dead
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, Oct. 25, 2001)
ARTICLE
(By, Oct. 25, 2001)
Wednesday, October 24, 2001:
On This Day: October 24 (Antoine van Leeuwenhoek 10/24/1632-8/26/1723,
Sarah J. Hale 10/24/1788-4/30/1879, Moss Hart 10/24/1904-12/20/1961,
Y.A. Tittle 1926, F. Murray Abraham 1939)
UN CHARTER BECOMES 'LAW OF NATIONS,' 29 RATIFYING IT
(By BERTRAM D. HULEN, Oct. 24, 1945)
Bob Kane, 83, the Cartoonist Who Created 'Batman,' Is Dead
[born 10/24/1915] (By SARAH BOXER, November 7, 1998)
William H. Kirk Dies at 92; Aided East Harlem Diversity
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, Oct. 24, 2001)
Pavel Bunich, Reformer for New Russian Economy, Is Dead at 71
(By PAUL LEWIS, Oct. 24, 2001)
THE DISEASE: Officials Voice New Worry as Anthrax Taints Off-Site White House Mailroom
(By FRANCIS X. CLINES, Oct. 24, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: Copies of 3 Anthrax-Tainted Letters Are Released by Justice Dept.
(By DAVID JOHNSTON, Oct. 24, 2001)
23 Are Named Winners of Annual 'Genius Awards' Given by MacArthur Foundation
(By MEL GUSSOW, Oct. 24, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Fighting a New Health Threat, on the Fly
(By STEPHEN ENGELBERG & LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Oct. 24, 2001)
THE PRESIDENT: Bush Emphasizes, More Than Once, That He Doesn't Have Anthrax
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Oct. 24, 2001)
BUSINESS: Shares Close Moderately Lower, Reversing Early Gains
[Dow -37, Nasdaq -4] (By REUTERS, Oct. 24, 2001)
* LIFE'S WORK: An Overhanging Bleakness
(By LISA BELKIN, Oct. 24, 2001)
CIPRO: U.S. Says Bayer Will Cut Cost of Its Anthrax Drug
(By KEITH BRADSHER with EDMUND L. ANDREWS, Oct. 24, 2001)
Amazon Had Smaller Loss on Flat Sales in 3rd Quarter
(By SAUL HANSELL, Oct. 24, 2001)
Lucent Reports $8.8 Billion Loss and a Dim Outlook
(By SIMON ROMERO, Oct. 24, 2001)
MANAGEMENT: A Legal Tightrope for Employers After Attacks
(By SANA SIWOLOP, Oct. 24, 2001)
* Winfrey Rescinds Offer to Author for Guest Appearance [Jonathan Franzen]
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Oct. 24, 2001)
Tuesday, October 23, 2001:
On This Day: October 23 (Pierre Larousse 10/23/1817-1/3/1875,
Adlai Ewing Stevenson 10/23/1835-6/15/1914, Felix Bloch 10/23/1905-9/10/1983,
Pele 1940, Michael Crichton 1942)
Beirut Death Toll at 161 Americans; French Casualties Rise in Bombings
(By Thomas E. Friedman, Oct. 23, 1983)
John W. Heisman, Noted Coach, Dies
[born 10/23/1869] (NY Times, October 4, 1936)
Sir John Plumb, British Historian, Dies at 90
(By PAUL LEWIS, Oct. 23, 2001)
The Rev. Howard Finster, Georgia Folk Artist, Dies at 84
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 23, 2001)
Otis Young, Actor Who Broke a Barrier, Dies at 69
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 23, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Terror in the Mail
(NY TIMES, Oct. 23, 2001)
EDITORIAL OBSERVER: Insights of a Warrior in Ancient Afghanistan
(By STEVEN R. WEISMAN, Oct. 23, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Dear Ariel and Yasir
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Oct. 23, 2001)
The Terror Economy
(By RICHARD BERNER, Oct. 23, 2001)
The Parks We Deserve
(By LYNDEN B. MILLER, Oct. 23, 2001)
Bowdlerized by Microsoft
(By MARK GOLDBLATT, Oct. 23, 2001)
LETTERS: Poverty and the Seeds of Terror
(By SAUL GOLDMAN et. al., Oct. 23, 2001)
NEW YORK: Anthrax Traces Are in Dan Rather's Office. So Is He.
(By ERIC LIPTON, Oct. 23, 2001)
NOTEBOOKS: F.B.I. Finds Bulk Candy Purchase to Be Harmless
(By RONALD SMOTHERS, Oct. 23, 2001)
BUSINESS: Stocks Regain Most of Their Losses From Last Week
(By MICHAEL BRICK, Oct. 23, 2001)
Monday, October 22, 2001:
On This Day: October 22 (Franz Liszt 10/22/1811-7/31/1886, George Beadle 10/22/1903-6/9/1989,
Constance Bennett 10//22/1904-7/24/1965, Jimmie Foxx 10/22/1907-7/21/1967,
Joan Fontaine 1917, Annette Funicello 1942, Catherine Deneuve 1943, Jeff Goldblum 1952)
President Kennedy Announced Blockade of Cuba
(By ANTHONY LEWIS, Oct. 22, 1968)
Timothy Leary, Pied Piper Of Psychedelic 60's, Dies at 75
[born 10/22/1920] (By LAURA MANSNERUS, June 1, 1996)
Lady Jean Rankin, 96, Dies; Waited on Queen Mother
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Oct. 22, 2001)
Edward Radford, 79, Scholar of the Risks From Radiation
(By CARMEL McCOUBREY, Oct. 22, 2001)
James F. Phillips, 70, Environment Advocate Called the Fox
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Oct. 22, 2001)
Sunday, October 21, 2001:
On This Day: October 21 (Samuel Taylor Coleridge 10/21/1772-7/25/1834, Alfred Nobel 10/21/1833-12/10/1896,
Ted Shawn 10/21/1891-1/9/1972, Louis L'Amour 10/21/1908-6/10/1988, Sir George Solti 10/21/1912-9/5/1997,
Whitey Ford 1928, Benjamin Netanyahu 1949)
Thomas Edison Invented Electric Light
(NY Times, Oct. 21, 1879)
Dizzy Gillespie, Who Sounded Some of Modern Jazz's Earliest Notes, Dies at 75
[born 10/21/1917] (By PETER WATROUS, January 7, 1993)
Eleanor McDonald, Breeder of Champion Bichon, Dies at 66
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Oct. 21, 2001)
Edward P. Radford, 79, Researcher in Radiation Cancer Risk, Is Dead
(By CARMEL McCOUBREY, Oct. 21, 2001)
Bernard H. Fox, 83, Researcher of Psychological Role in Cancer, Dies
(By CARMEL McCOUBREY, Oct. 21, 2001)
* STYLE: Spiritual Balm, at Only $23.95 [Deepak Chopra sends 20,000 emails]
(By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Oct. 21, 2001)
SUNDAY MAGAZINE: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 21, 2001)
* ON LANGUAGE: The Hot New Lopsidedness in Warmaking
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Oct. 30, 2001)
Saturday, October 20, 2001:
On This Day: October 20 (Andrea Della Robbia 10/20/1435-8/4/1525, Sir Christopher Wren 10/20/1632-2/25/1723,
Arthur Rimbaud 10/20/1854-11/10/1891, Charles Edward Ives 10/20/1874-5/19/1954, Bela Lugosi 10/20/1884-8/16/1956,
Sir James Chadwick 10/20/1891-7/24/1974, Dame Anna Neagle 10/20/1904-6/3/1986, Mickey Mantle 10/20/1931-8/13/1995,
Art Buchwald 1925, Arlene Francis 1908)
Nixon Discharges Cox For Defiance; Abolishes Watergate Task Force;
Richardson And Ruckelshaus Out
(By DOUGLAS E. KNEELAND, Oct. 20, 1973)
Dr. John Dewey Dead at 92; Philosopher a Noted Liberal
[born 10/20/1859] (NY Times, June 2, 1952)
* David Lewis, Philosopher And Metaphysician, Dies at 60
(By SARAH BOXER, Oct. 20, 2001)
Leonard LaRue, Rescuer in the Korean War, Dies at 87
(By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Oct. 20, 2001)
J. B. Slowinski, 38, an Expert on Venomous Snake Species, is Dead
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Oct. 20, 2001)
Richard Buckle, Author on Dance, Dies at 85
(By JACK ANDERSON, Oct. 20, 2001)
Polly Rowles, 87, Actress in TV and Film Is Dead
(NY TIMES, Oct. 21, 2001)
Joe Lubin, 84, Co-Writer of 'Tutti Frutti,' Dies
(NY TIMES, Oct. 21, 2001)
THE BASES: Stateside Soldiers Proud, and Military Spouses Nervous
(By KEVIN SACK with SARA RIMER, Oct. 20, 2001)
THE PHARMACIES: Anthrax Drug Top Seller in Mexico
(By GREG WINTER, Oct. 20, 2001)
AMERICAN MUSLIMS: Saudis Have Long Tried to Add U.S. Muslims to the State Religion
(By BLAINE HARDEN, Oct. 20, 2001)
THE DEMOCRATS: Bush Winning Gore Backers' High Praises
(By RICHARD L. BERKE, Oct. 20, 2001)
Plastic Explosives Are Found in Bag in Philadelphia Terminal
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 20, 2001)
AIRLINE SECURITY: Airline Stops Offering Creamer and Sweetener
(By MICHAEL JANOFSKY, Oct. 20, 2001)
RELIGION JOURNAL: Humanist Jewish Group Reaches New Milestone
(By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, Oct. 20, 2001)
AN INQUIRY: F.B.I. Asks if Hijacking Plot Included Plane at Kennedy
(By MATTHEW L. WALD, Oct. 20, 2001)
THE NEW CASES: 2 New Anthrax Infections Found; Previous Cases Share Same Strain
(By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Oct. 20, 2001)
Friday, October 19, 2001:
On This Day: October 19 (Sir Thomas Brown 10/19/1605-10/19/1682, Leigh Hunt 10/19/1784-8/28/1859,
Alfred Dreyfus 10/19/1859-7/12/1935, Auguste Lumiere 10/19/1862-4/10/1954, John Le Carre 1931,
Peter Max 1937, Patricia Ireland 1945)
STOCKS PLUNGE 508 POINTS, A DROP OF 22.6%; 604 MILLION VOLUME NEARLY DOUBLES RECORD
(By LAWRENCE J. De MARIA, October 19, 1987)
Charles Merrill, Broker, Dies; Founder of Merrill Lynch Firm
[born 10/19/1885] (By MICHAEL T. KAUFMAN, Oct. 7, 1986)
Etta Jones, Jazz Standards Vocalist, Dies at 72
(By BEN RATLIFF, Oct. 19, 2001)
Kenneth L. Hale, 67, Preserver of Nearly Extinct Languages, Dies
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, Oct. 19, 2001)
THE BIOLOGICAL THREAT: Ridge Makes Effort to Calm Public's Anthrax Fears
(By TODD S. PURDUM and ELIZABETH BECKER, Oct. 19, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: Link Now Seen in Anthrax and Hijackings
(By DAVID JOHNSTON with WILLIAM J. BROAD, Oct. 19, 2001)
Behind Las Vegas's Glitter, Heavy Losses and Layoffs
(By STEVEN GREENHOUSE, Oct. 19, 2001)
Influential American Muslims Temper Their Tone
(By LAURIE GOODSTEIN, Oct. 19, 2001)
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Cheney, Under Heavy Security, Pays a Visit to Trade Center Site
(By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Oct. 19, 2001)
Increased U.S. Activity Said to Aid Afghan Rebels
(By THOM SHANKER & STEVEN LEE MYERS, Oct. 19, 2001)
STRATEGIC RELATIONS: Russia and U.S. Optimistic on Defense Issues
(By PATRICK E. TYLER, Oct. 19, 2001)
THE PRESIDENT: Bush and China's Leader Emphasize Need to Fight Terrorism Together
(By DAVID E. SANGER, Oct. 19, 2001)
EDUCATION: Anti-Western and Extremist Views Pervade Saudi Schools
(By NEIL MacFARQUHAR, Oct. 19, 2001)
PUBLIC INFORMATION: Pentagon Corners Output of Satellite Images of Afghanistan
(By MICHAEL R. GORDON, Oct. 19, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: Diplomatic Advances, a 6th Case of Anthrax and a Voice of Authority
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Oct. 19, 2001)
Prosecutors Tied Defendants to bin Laden
(NY TIMES, Oct. 19, 2001)
COALITIONS: Ex-Afghan King Said to Agree to Role in Kabul for Taliban
(By REUTERS, Oct. 19, 2001)
NY REGION: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 19, 2001)
Lab Works Round-the-Clock, Analyzing Details in Anthrax
(By RICHARD PEacute;REZ-PEÑA, Oct. 19, 2001)
Vigilance Is Personal When Threat Is Invisible
(By KIRK JOHNSON, Oct. 19, 2001)
THE VICTIMS: A Favorite Uncle, a Stock Market Whiz, and a Steely Marathon Man
(NY TIMES, Oct. 19, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Detention and Accountability
(NY TIMES, Oct. 19, 2001)
EDITORIAL: In the Body's Place
(NY TIMES, Oct. 19, 2001)
* OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: A Tweezer Defense Shield?
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Oct. 19, 2001)
OP-ED: The Rifle and the Veil
(By JAN GOODWIN & JESSICA NEUWIRTH, Oct. 19, 2001)
* OP-ED: A Better Society in a Time of War
(By ROBERT PUTNAM, Oct. 19, 2001)
OP-ED: A Governor Works in Mysterious Ways
(By GARRISON KEILLOR, Oct. 19, 2001)
LETTERS: In the War of Nerves, the Capitol Is a Front
(By VICTOR GALINDO et. al., Oct. 19, 2001)
BUSINESS: Technology Shares Rise, but Worries Affect Blue Chips
[Dow -70, Nasdaq +6] (By REUTERS, Oct. 19, 2001)
THE TREATMENT: Canada Overrides Patent for Cipro to Treat Anthrax
(By AMY HARMON & ROBERT PEAR, Oct. 19, 2001)
Merrill Set for Changes That Will Cost Thousands of Jobs
(By PATRICK McGEEHAN, Oct. 19, 2001)
* FLOYD NORRIS: After Terror, Insiders Switched From Selling to Buying
(By FLOYD NORRIS, Oct. 19, 2001)
Microsoft's Profit Report Beats Wall St. Estimates
(By STEVE LOHR, Oct. 19, 2001)
THE DRUG MAKER: Bayer, Defending Its Turf, Says It Can Meet Demand
(By EDMUND L. ANDREWS, Oct. 19, 2001)
THE SUPPLY: Some Wholesalers Rationing Their Shipments of Antibiotic
(By LESLIE KAUFMAN with MILT FREUDENHEIM, Oct. 19, 2001)
An Artiste Invades Stodgy G.M.
(By DANNY HAKIM, Oct. 19, 2001)
* Ebay Continues to Flourish Despite Faltering Economy
(By SAUL HANSELL, Oct. 19, 2001)
Gateway Reports Loss of $520 Million in Third Quarter
(By CHRIS GAITHER, Oct. 19, 2001)
Sharply Lower Sales Propel Losses at Nortel Networks and Corning
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Oct. 19, 2001)
ADVERTISING: Agencies Step Up Efforts to Gauge Consumer Attitudes
(By STUART ELLIOTT, Oct. 19, 2001)
SPORTS MEDIA AND BUSINESS: Networks May Seek Relief From N.F.L.
(By RICHARD SANDOMIR, Oct. 19, 2001)
Computer Associates Shows Profit and a Net Loss
(By REUTERS, Oct. 19, 2001)
THE MEDIA: Making News Instead of Broadcasting It
(By JIM RUTENBERG, Oct. 19, 2001)
New York City Jobless Rate Jumps to 6.3%
(By LESLIE EATON, Oct. 19, 2001)
Claims Filed by Jobless Remain Near 9-Year High
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Oct. 19, 2001)
U.P.S. Profit Down 19% in 3rd Quarter
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 19, 2001)
* ART: 'INTO THE LIGHT': An Exhibit at the Whitney Illuminates the Recent Past
(By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Oct. 19, 2001)
* ART REVIEW: Glittering Prizes From the East, Melding Metals and Cultures
(By ROBERTA SMITH, Oct. 19, 2001)
* ART: AL HIRSCHFELD: A Boundless Urbanity in Just a Few Lines
(By GRACE GLUECK, Oct. 19, 2001)
* ART: Human Stories Behind Renaissance Portraits
(By HOLLAND COTTER, Oct. 19, 2001)
INSIDE ART: Hoping to Save Calder Sculpture
(By CAROL VOGEL, Oct. 19, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'ROOSEVELT'S SECRET WAR': A Detailed Look at Roosevelt, the Intelligence Consumer
(By PHILIP BOBBITT, Oct. 19, 2001)
CABARET: STACEY KENT: A Voice to Chase the Blues With a Buoyant Swing
(By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Oct. 19, 2001)
ANTIQUES: Opulence, á la Fran&ccedi;aise
(By WENDY MOONAN, Oct. 19, 2001)
FILM: 'THE LAST CASTLE': Manning the Ramparts for Old Glory
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Oct. 19, 2001)
'COOL & CRAZY': The Singing Descendants of the Vikings
(By DAVE KEHR, Oct. 19, 2001)
FROM HELL': A Conspiracy Shrouded in London Fog
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Oct. 19, 2001)
MUSIC: Vivaldi and a Touch of Twang From Some Flexible Fiddlers
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Oct. 19, 2001)
THEATER: 'THE THEFT OF SITA': A Tale Told by Shadows Blends the Old and the New
(By NEIL GENZLINGER, Oct. 19, 2001)
THEATER: 'AN IMMACULATE MISCONCEPTION': He May Think It's Passion, but She Knows It's Science
(By ANITA GATES, Oct. 19, 2001)
TV: 'VICTORIA AND ALBERT': A Marriage Like Other Marriages, Only It's Victoria's
(NY TIMES, Oct. 19, 2001)
* WEEKEND EXCURSION: An Oasis of Peace and Contemplation [Ephrata Cloister, PA]
(By RICHARD RUDA, Oct. 19, 2001)
THE OUTSIDER: The Thrill of Shooting From a Canoe (With a Camera, Not a Gun)
(By JAMES GORMAN, Oct. 19, 2001)
Thursday, October 18, 2001:
On This Day: October 18 (Pope Pius II 10/18/1405-8/14/1464, Canaletto 10/18/1697-4/20/1768,
Robert L. Stevens 10/18/1787-4/20/1856, Henri Bergson 10/18/1859-1/4/1941,
Melina Mercouri 10/18/1925-3/6/1994, Chuck Berry 1926, Terry McMillan 1951,
Martina Navratilova 1956, Wynton Marsalis 1961)
2 Black Power Advocates Ousted From Olympics
(By JOSEPH M. SHEEHAN, Oct. 18, 1968)
Pierre Trudeau Is Dead at 80; Dashing Fighter for Canada
[born 10/18/1919] (By MICHAEL T. KAUFMAN, September 29, 2000)
Jay Livingston, Who Co-Wrote Hit Songs for the Movies, Dies at 86
(By RICHARD SEVERO, Oct. 18, 2001)
Frederick DeMatteis Dies at 78; Prospered as a Builder
(By ERIC PACE, Oct. 18, 2001)
Anthrax Scares Nation Into Testing
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 18, 2001)
U.S. Offers $1 Million for Anthrax Attacker's Capture
(By DAVID STOUT, Oct. 18, 2001)
MEDIA WATCH: AN ANALYSIS: Congress and Journalists in a Tense Role Reversal
(By ALESSANDRA STANLEY, Oct. 18, 2001)
FOREIGN COOPERATION: Egypt and Saudi Arabia Won't Supply List of Passengers Flying to U.S.
(By ROBERT PEAR, Oct. 18, 2001)
COMMANDER IN CHIEF: Bush's New Focus Requires a Shift in His China Policy
(By DAVID E. SANGER, Oct. 18, 2001)
PRO-U.S. MUSLIMS: Uzbeks Near Border Praise Attacks on Taliban
(By C. J. CHIVERS, Oct. 18, 2001)
THE PRESIDENT: Bush Says Aim Is to Ease Entry of Land Force
(By MICHAEL R. GORDON and THOM SHANKER, Oct. 18, 2001)
CHINA: On Death Row, China's Source of Transplants
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, Oct. 18, 2001)
THE NORTHERN ALLIANCE: U.S. Tactics Thwart Afghan Rebels
(By DAVID ROHDE, Oct. 18, 2001)
MULLAH: Taliban Chief Urges Troops: Defy 'Infidel'
(By JOHN F. BURNS, Oct. 18, 2001)
REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK: In Quiet Corners, the Roots of Afghan Rebellion
(By DOUGLAS FRANTZ, Oct. 18, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: Shutdowns, Uncertainties and, Suddenly, Smallpox as a Topic
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Oct. 18, 2001)
Rehavam Zeevi: Uncompromising as Enemy, Often Agreeable as Friend
(By IAN FISHER, Oct. 18, 2001)
THE GOVERNOR: Pataki Quits Manhattan Office After Anthrax Is Found
(By ERIC LIPTON, Oct. 18, 2001)
NBC: Doctor in City Reported Anthrax Case Before Florida
(By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Oct. 18, 2001)
JITTERS: These Days, Even Soap Is a Suspicious Powder
(By RICHARD LEZIN JONES, Oct. 18, 2001)
FAITH: Delivering the Gospel to Ground Zero's Streets
(By ANDREW JACOBS, Oct. 18, 2001)
ON BASEBALL: Yanks' Secret: Their Pitching
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 18, 2001)
YANKEES 4, MARINERS 2: Pettitte and O'Neill Lead Game 1 Charge
(By BUSTER OLNEY, Oct. 18, 2001)
BRAVES 8, DIAMONDBACKS 1: Lopez's Homer Starts Braves Rout
(By RAFAEL HERMOSO, Oct. 18, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Coping With Bioterrorism: Beyond Safety
(NY TIMES, Oct. 18, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Coping With Bioterrorism: New Anthrax Fears
(NY TIMES, Oct. 18, 2001)
OP-ED ESSAY: Bush's Shanghai Gesture
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Oct. 18, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: The Democrats Fiddle
(By BOB HERBERT, Oct. 18, 2001)
OP-ED: Who Made the Anthrax?
(By RICHARD BUTLER, Oct. 18, 2001)
OP-ED: The Hunger Factor
(By MICHAEL O'HANLON, Oct. 18, 2001)
LETTERS: The War Over Here: Anthrax Spreads Its Terror
(By J. WESLEY BOYD, M.D. et. al., Oct. 18, 2001)
The War Over There: Arms and Arguments
(By DANIEL A. GREENBAUM et. al., Oct. 18, 2001)
BUSINESS: Technology Shares Fall, With Nasdaq Losing 4.4%
[Dow -151, Nasdaq -76] (By SHERRI DAY, Oct. 18, 2001)
Greenspan Sees Economic Slide as Temporary
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Oct. 18, 2001)
CIPRO: U.S. Acts to Increase Supply of Drugs to Counter Anthrax
(By MELODY PETERSEN and ROBERT PEAR, Oct. 18, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: Primedia Tries to Recover From Its Internet Party
(By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, Oct. 18, 2001)
Online Downturn Means Drop for AOL Time Warner
(By SETH SCHIESEL, Oct. 18, 2001)
THE DRUG MAKER: Demand for Cipro May Be a Break for Bayer, and a Headache
(By EDMUND L. ANDREWS, Oct. 18, 2001)
Thousands of Out-of-Work People Attend Job Fair
(By EDWARD WYATT, Oct. 18, 2001)
STUDENT VISAS: Visas for Foreign Students at an Anxious Time
(By JONATHAN D. GLATER, Oct. 18, 2001)
Apple Tops Analysts' Lowered Forecasts
(By MATT RICHTEL, Oct. 18, 2001)
EMC Reports Drop in Sales and a Loss in the Quarter
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, Oct. 18, 2001)
ARTS ABROAD: Adopting a Country, Then Crashing Its Best-Seller List
(By ALAN RIDING, Oct. 18, 2001)
* ARTS: A Walk With Ishmael in That Island City
(By A. O. SCOTT, Oct. 18, 2001)
BOOKS: 'TOO CLOSE TO CALL': Recounting That Recount, Detail by Detail by Detail
(By JANET MASLIN, Oct. 18, 2001)
MAKING BOOKS: New Children's Book Toys to Chew On
(By MARTIN ARNOLD, Oct. 18, 2001)
DANCE: 'DRUMMING': A Wind Scatters Dancers and Gathers Them Back
(By JACK ANDERSON, Oct. 18, 2001)
DANCE: 'KIND OF BLUE': A Tribute by Parsons
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, Oct. 18, 2001)
FILM CRITIC: 'Jabberwocky': Early Gilliam, Fright-White Teeth and All
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Oct. 18, 2001)
MUSIC: BOSTON SYMPHONY: Strange Yet Convincing, a Requiem Breaks the Rules
(By BERNARD HOLLAND, Oct. 18, 2001)
THEATER: 'AN ADULT EVENING OF SHEL SILVERSTEIN': Gleefully Skewering the Quirks of Humanity
(By BRUCE WEBER, Oct. 18, 2001)
TV: 'DANGEROUS STRAITS': U.S. and China, Entwined in Commerce and Mistrust
(By SAMUEL G. FREEDMAN, Oct. 18, 2001)
* SCIENCE: Precursor to Tiniest Chip Is Developed
(By KENNETH CHANG, Oct. 18, 2001)
ARTICLE
(By, Oct. 18, 2001)
Wednesday, October 17, 2001:
On This Day: October 17 (Frederick Hassam 10/17/1859-8/27/1935, Jean Arthur 10/17/1900-6/19/1991,
Nathanael West 10/17/1903-12/22/1940, Pope John Paul I 10/17/1912-9/28/1978,
Montgomery Clift 10/17/1920-7/23/1966, Arthur Miller 1915, Jimmy Breslin 1930)
CAPONE CONVICTED OF DODGING TAXES; MAY GET 17 YEARS
(By MEYER BERGER, Oct. 17, 1931)
Rita Hayworth, Movie Legend, Dies
[born 10/17/1918] (By ALBIN KREBS, May 16, 1987)
* Zhang Xueliang, 100, Dies; One-Time Chinese Warlord Who Changed Course of Chinese History
(By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF, Oct. 17, 2001)
Willam Christensen, 99, Dies; Helped Ballet Flourish in U.S.
(By JACK ANDERSON, Oct. 17, 2001)
Margaret Aitcheson, Tipper Gore's Mother, Dies at 77
(By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 17, 2001)
Luis García Navarro, 61, Opera Conductor of Spain, Dies
(By ALAN RIDING, Oct. 17, 2001)
John Collins, Noted Jazz Guitarist, Dies at 83
(NY TIMES, Oct. 17, 2001)
Robert M. Berne, 83, Cardiologist, Medical Educator and Author, Dies
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, Oct. 17, 2001)
CAPITOL HILL: House Will Shut Down Until Tuesday for Anthrax Screening
(By DAVID STOUT, Oct. 17, 2001)
THE SUSPECTS: Mohamed Atta in Close Call in Incident at Miami Airport
(By JIM YARDLEY, Oct. 17, 2001)
* Anthrax Mailed to Senate Is Found to Be Potent Form
(By DAVID JOHNSTON & ALISON MITCHELL, Oct. 17, 2001)
THE FALSE ALARMS: Anthrax Fears Appear to Spread, Even Without New Verified Cases
(By MICHAEL JANOFSKY, Oct. 17, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Daschle Letter Called First Use of Anthrax as Weapon
(By STEPHEN ENGELBERG & JUDITH MILLER, Oct. 17, 2001)
THE FIRST CASES: Jeb Bush Tries to Avert Panic; 2nd Anthrax Victim Is Healing
(By DANA CANEDY with LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Oct. 17, 2001)
THE PUBLIC HEALTH SYSTEM: Flood of Anthrax Tests Swamps Laboratories
(By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, Oct. 17, 2001)
THE CONGRESS: On Capitol Hill, Issues of Fear and Safety Hit Close to Home
(By ADAM CLYMER, Oct. 17, 2001)
THE SECURITY CHIEF: Ridge Keeps Low Profile as Insecurity Is on Rise
(By ELIZABETH BECKER, Oct. 17, 2001)
THE AIR SYSTEM: Control Towers Are Vulnerable, Union Says
(By MATTHEW L. WALD, Oct. 17, 2001)
More Fault Found With Large Provider of Airport Security
(By MATTHEW L. WALD, Oct. 17, 2001)
AIR WAR: Opposition Shells Taliban-Held City
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 17, 2001)
DIPLOMACY: Powell Seeks to Soothe India on Terrorism Agenda
(By REUTERS, Oct. 17, 2001)
MILITARY ANALYSIS: U.S. Hopes to Break the Taliban With Pounding From the Air
(By MICHAEL R. GORDON, Oct. 17, 2001)
ISLAMABAD: Powell Suggests Role for Taliban
(By PATRICK E. TYLER, Oct. 17, 2001)
THE REFUGEES: Harrowing Trip to a Desolate Haven in Pakistan
(By BARRY BEARAK, Oct. 17, 2001)
AIR WAR: Pilots Told to Fire at Will in Some Zones
(By STEVEN LEE MYERS & THOM SHANKER, Oct. 17, 2001)
* NEWS ANALYSIS: A Rush for Cipro, and the Global Ripples
(By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr., Oct. 17, 2001)
* OTHER MEDICATIONS: Cipro Isn't the Only Drug That Can Be Prescribed, Anthrax Experts Say
(By GINA KOLATA, Oct. 17, 2001)
THE ANTIBIOTIC: Production of Cipro Is Being Tripled, German Company Says
(By MELODY PETERSEN & ROBERT PEAR, Oct. 17, 2001)
THE OPPOSITION: Rebel Leader Rejects Role for Taliban in New Regime
(By DEXTER FILKINS, Oct. 17, 2001)
MEDIA: Rumsfeld to Appeal to Arab Public on Mideast TV Network
(By ERIC SCHMITT, Oct. 17, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: A Focus on Bioterrorism, a Show of Military Might
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Oct. 17, 2001)
China Eases Internet Censorship During APEC Talks
(By REUTERS, Oct. 17, 2001)
NEW YORK: On a Day of Jitters, City and F.B.I. Differ Over Anthrax Sweep at ABC
(By ERIC LIPTON, Oct. 17, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: Mailing Lethal Substances Is a Rare Crime, Tough to Solve When Not a Hoax
(By DAVID W. CHEN with CHRISTOPHER DREW, Oct. 17, 2001)
Laura Bush, Ex-Teacher, Goes Back to Kindergarten
(By RONALD SMOTHERS, Oct. 17, 2001)
1 LIBERTY PLAZA: Tower Survives Greatly Exaggerated Rumors and Prepares to Reopen
(By SUSAN SAULNY, Oct. 17, 2001)
Beyond Calamity, Death Goes On
(By SHAILA K. DEWAN, Oct. 17, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Hoarding Cipro
(NY TIMES, Oct. 17, 2001)
EDITORIAL: A New Bronx Cheer
(NY TIMES, Oct. 17, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: Plague on the Potomac
(By MAUREEN DOWD, Oct. 17, 2001)
OP-ED: Common Interests in a Hazardous World
(By DAVID SHAMBAUGH and ROBERT S. LITWAK, Oct. 17, 2001)
OP-ED: Small Business, Badly Damaged
(By FRED P. HOCHBERG, Oct. 17, 2001)
OP-ED: How to Cover a War
(By MARVIN KALB, Oct. 17, 2001)
LETTERS: Anthrax Alert: When Fear Arrives in the Mail
(By PETER J. RIGA et. al., Oct. 17, 2001)
LETTERS: Good and Evil [Humanist perspective]
(By EDD DOERR, Oct. 17, 2001)
LETTERS: Enduring Code Names [Why not ask our poet laureate?]
(By IRA LEVIN, Oct. 17, 2001)
BUSINESS: Share Prices Rise Slightly as Investors Remain Cautious
[Dow +37, Nasdaq +26] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 17, 2001)
* Deepening Wrinkles in the New Economy
(By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Oct. 17, 2001)
TV NEWS: CNN Submits 6 Questions After Overture by bin Laden
(By JIM RUTENBERG and BILL CARTER, Oct. 17, 2001)
Out of Work, and Out of the Benefits Loop
(By DAVID LEONHARDT, Oct. 17, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: Cantor Adds to Network for Its Data on Prices
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Oct. 17, 2001)
ADVERTISING: Bowing to Nation's Mood, Retailer Cancels Issue of Racy Catalog
(By STUART ELLIOTT, Oct. 17, 2001)
Businesses Finding That Good Security Is No Longer Optional
(By REED ABELSON & JONATHAN D. GLATER, Oct. 17, 2001)
BUSINESS TRAVEL: Anthrax Fears May Detract From Air Safety Concerns
(By JOE SHARKEY, Oct. 17, 2001)
THE BOSS: Politics and a Texas Airline
(By COLLEEN C. BARRETT, Oct. 17, 2001)
WORKPLACE: Recruiters Fawn Over Ex-Airline Employees
(By MELINDA LIGOS, Oct. 17, 2001)
MY JOB: I'm a Beacon of the Road
(By KATHERINE FARRELL, Oct. 17, 2001)
Intel Meets Forecasts and Expects Slightly Better Earnings
(By CHRIS GAITHER, Oct. 17, 2001)
I.B.M. Sounds Confident as It Reports Sound Profits
(By STEVE LOHR, Oct. 17, 2001)
Assets of Fidelity Magellan Fund Decline 23%
(By REUTERS, Oct. 17, 2001)
Earnings Fall Again at Charles Schwab
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Oct. 17, 2001)
* ARTS ABROAD: Stranger Than Chatwin's Fiction [Meissen porcelain]
(By ALAN RIDING, Oct. 17, 2001)
BOOKS: 'FIRE': From Fighting the Taliban to Battling Blazes in Idaho
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Oct. 17, 2001)
COMEDY: THE NUALAS: Irish and Making Fun of 'Riverdance'? O.K.
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Oct. 17, 2001)
DANCE: '(IN)FORMATIONS': At Lincoln Center, Folk Dance in a Village Square (Sort of)
(By JACK ANDERSON, Oct. 17, 2001)
DANCE: NEXT STEP GALA: A Gathering of Many Troupes and Many Styles, for a Cause
(By JACK ANDERSON, Oct. 17, 2001)
POP: JANE'S ADDICTION: Reunited in an Erotic Quest for Love
(By JON PARELES, Oct. 17, 2001)
THEATER: 'THE COMPLETE WORKS OF WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE (ABRIDGED)':
And You Still Thought 'Hamlet' Was a Tragedy
(By D. J. R. BRUCKNER, Oct. 17, 2001)
THEATER: 'FOUR LITTLE GIRLS': Hues of Innocence & War From Picasso the Playwright
(By ANITA GATES, Oct. 17, 2001)
HEALTH: Drug May Protect People at Risk for Diabetes
(By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 17, 2001)
Tuesday, October 16, 2001:
On This Day: October 16 (Noah Webster 10/16/1758-5/28/1843, Oscar Wilde 10/16/1854-11/30/1900,
David Ben-Gurion 10/16/1886-12/1/1973, William Douglas 10/16/1898-1/19/1980, Angela Lansbury 1925)
China Tests Atomic Bomb, Asks Summit Talk On Ban; Johnson Minimizes Peril
(By SEYMOUR TOPPING, Oct. 16, 1964)
Eugene O'Neill Dies of Pneumonia; Playwright, 65, Won Nobel Prize
[born 10/16/1888] (NY Times, November 28, 1953)
Lord Hailsham Dies at 94; A Tory With a Lighter Side
(By PAUL LEWIS, Oct. 16, 2001)
* THE OVERVIEW: Echoes of Anthrax Scare Reverberate Across Nation
(By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG & ALISON MITCHELL, Oct. 16, 2001)
* THE TAPES: 'We Have Some Planes,' Hijacker Told Controller
(By MATTHEW L. WALD with KEVIN SACK, Oct. 16, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: In Shift, Officials Look Into Possibility Anthrax Cases Have bin Laden Ties
(By DAVID JOHNSTON, Oct. 16, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Information, Please
(By TODD S. PURDUM, Oct. 16, 2001)
THE FIRST ANTHRAX CASE: Spores Found at Post Office in Boca Raton
(By DAVID FIRESTONE, Oct. 16, 2001)
THE 20TH SUSPECT: Man Held in U.S. Was Wired 2 Large Sums From Germany
(By PHILIP SHENON, Oct. 16, 2001)
THE PUBLIC: On a Warm Autumn Day, a Chill Wind in Louisville
(By SARA RIMER, Oct. 16, 2001)
THE MULLAHS: Taliban Figure Asks Bombing Halt to Make Deal on bin Laden
(By JOHN F. BURNS, Oct. 16, 2001)
DIPLOMACY: Powell, in Pakistan, Focuses on Shape of Post-Taliban Regime
(By PATRICK E. TYLER, Oct. 16, 2001)
THE STRATEGY: Taliban Leader Is Target in U.S. Air Campaign
(By MICHAEL R. GORDON & TIM WEINER, Oct. 16, 2001)
THE COMBAT: Northern Alliance Says They Are Nearing Key Taliban City
(By DEXTER FILKINS, Oct. 16, 2001)
PROPAGANDA: U.S. Steps Up Leaflets to Sway Afghans
(By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS, Oct. 16, 2001)
DIPLOMACY: Powell, in Pakistan, Focuses on Shape of Post-Taliban Regime
(By PATRICK E. TYLER, Oct. 16, 2001)
ECONOMY: Afghans in Kabul Are Reported to Be Selling Belongings to Buy Food
(By DAVID ROHDE, Oct. 16, 2001)
THE POWDER: From Berlin to Brazil, the 'Anthrax' Letters
(By STEVEN ERLANGER, Oct. 16, 2001)
THE MEDIA: 'Spokesmen' for Al Qaeda Issue New Threat via CNN
(By BILL CARTER and JIM RUTENBERG, Oct. 16, 2001)
China Adds Security for Bush's Trip on Saturday
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, Oct. 16, 2001)
LA COURNEUVE JOURNAL: In Suburban Squalor Near Paris, Echoes of Jihad
(By CHRIS HEDGES, Oct. 16, 2001)
Young Japanese Breaking Old Salaryman's Bonds
(By JAMES BROOKE, Oct. 16, 2001)
NY REGION: The Fish Return to Fulton Market (Along With the Mongers)
(By CHARLIE LeDUFF, Oct. 16, 2001)
NEW YORK CITY: Anthrax Found in Baby of ABC News Producer
(By ERIC LIPTON, Oct. 16, 2001)
They Don't Brake for Statues [1500 pigeons]
(By ALAN FEUER, Oct. 16, 2001)
* THE MAIL: In Mail, New Meaning for 'Handle With Care'
(By MICHAEL JANOFSKY and DAVID W. CHEN, Oct. 16, 2001)
TUNNEL VISION: Fearing Something in the Subway Air, Beyond the Odor
(By RANDY KENNEDY, Oct. 16, 2001)
SPORTS: Old Champs Outlasted the Kids/A>
(By GEORGE VECSEY, Oct. 16, 2001)
ON BASEBALL: Yankees Teach A's How to Win
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 16, 2001)
YANKEES 5, ATHLETICS 3: Yanks Come Back From Brink
(By BUSTER OLNEY, Oct. 16, 2001)
Add Catch to Jeter's Catalog of Heroics
(By STEVE POPPER, Oct. 16, 2001)
High-Five Night for Yanks' Owner
(By JACK CURRY, Oct. 16, 2001)
A's Left to Ponder Failed Chances
(By STEVE POPPER, Oct. 16, 2001)
Yankees Silence Athletics and Drum
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 16, 2001)
MARINERS 3, INDIANS 1: Seattle Advances by Pitching to Form
(By TYLER KEPNER, Oct. 16, 2001)
Johnson Will Match Power to Maddux's Finesse
(By RAFAEL HERMOSO, Oct. 16, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Responding to Anthrax Attacks
(NY TIMES, Oct. 16, 2001)
FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Saudi Royals and Reality
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Oct. 16, 2001)
The Battlefield in the American Mind
(By MARK DANNER, Oct. 16, 2001)
Heading Off Terrorism in the Balkans
(By MISHA GLENNY, Oct. 16, 2001)
LETTERS: Is a National ID Card the Answer?
(By KATIE CORRIGAN et. al., Oct. 16, 2001)
LETTERS: Anthrax and Antibiotics
(By CHARLES L. BARDES, M.D, Oct. 16, 2001)
BUSINESS: Wall Street Retreats Slightly as Earnings Period Begins
[Dow +3, Nasdaq -7] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 16, 2001)
CIPRO: Anthrax Fears Send Demand for a Drug Far Beyond Output
(By MELODY PETERSEN & ROBERT PEAR, Oct. 16, 2001)
THE DAMAGES: Bush Details Plan to Help Insurers on Future Terror Claims
(By STEPHEN LABATON with JOSEPH B. TREASTER, Oct. 16, 2001)
High Cost of Being Well: Benefits at a Premium
(By MILT FREUDENHEIM, Oct. 16, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: Bethlehem Steel Files for Bankruptcy
(By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH, Oct. 16, 2001)
Brill's Content Closes; Inside.com Is Cut Back
(By FELICITY BARRINGER, Oct. 16, 2001)
Intel and 2 Smaller Rivals Plan New Energy-Saving Chip Lines
(By CHRIS GAITHER, Oct. 16, 2001)
ADVERTISING: Direct Marketers Will Try New Approaches
(By STUART ELLIOTT, Oct. 16, 2001)
ARTS IN AMERICA: The Puzzling Watts Towers, Restored but Not Revealed
(By JAMES STERNGOLD, Oct. 16, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'HALF A LIFE': Naipaul's Latest Parable of Dislocation
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Oct. 16, 2001)
FILM: This Season Fewer Soldiers March Onscreen
(By RICK LYMAN, Oct. 16, 2001)
POP: TORI AMOS: A Cast of Thousands Perched on Tori Amos's Piano Bench
(By JON PARELES, Oct. 16, 2001)
THEATER: 'REBEL WITHOUT A PAUSE': Shaken but Still Undiluted Opinions
(By ANITA GATES, Oct. 16, 2001)
THEATER: 'LADY IN THE DARK': Down in the Dumps at the Top of Her Field
(By BRUCE WEBER, Oct. 16, 2001)
TV: 'SMALLVILLE': Hormones Bothering Him as Much as Kryptonite
(By NEIL GENZLINGER, Oct. 16, 2001)
* SCIENCE: 'Body of St. Luke' Gains Credibility
(By NICHOLAS WADE, Oct. 16, 2001)
Struggle to Survive for an 'Urban Whale'
(By CAROL KAESUK YOON, Oct. 16, 2001)
* ESSAY: Quantum Stew: How Physicists Are Redefining Reality's Rules
(By GEORGE JOHNSON, Oct. 16, 2001)
SCIENCE: After Attacks, Studies of Dust and Its Effects
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Oct. 16, 2001)
* DOCTOR'S WORLD: C.D.C. Team Tackles Anthrax
(By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, M.D., Oct. 16, 2001)
Monday, October 15, 2001:
On This Day: October 15 (Virgil 10/15/70 BC-9/21/19 BC, Evangelista Torricelli 10/15/1608-10/25/1647,
Allan Ramsay 10/15/1686-1/7/1758, Sir P.G. Wodehouse 10/15/1881-2/14/1975, Mervyn LeRoy 10/15/1900-9/13/1987,
John Kenneth Galbraith 1908, Lee Iacocca 1924)
Khrushchev Ousted From Top Posts; Brezhnev Gets Chief Party Position
(By HENRY TANNER, October 15, 1964)
German Philosopher Professor Nietzsche Dead
[born 10/15/1844] (NY Times, August 26, 1900)
Robert Riley, Fashion Expert Who Oversaw Noted Exhibitions, Dies at 90
(By ERIC PACE, Oct. 15, 2001)
Michael Kahan, 61, a CUNY Scholar on Electoral Matters
(By KAREN W. ARENSON, Oct. 15, 2001)
Barbara Kaiser, 84, Ex-Westchester Judge
(NY TIMES, Oct. 15, 2001)
The Attack on America: Complete Coverage
(NY TIMES, Oct. 15, 2001)
NATIONAL: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 15, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: Investigators Say Some Terror Cells Broken Up in U.S.
(By DON VAN NATTA Jr, Oct. 15, 2001)
THE DISEASE: U.S. Is Stepping Up Plan for Handling Anthrax Threat
(By PHILIP SHENON, Oct. 15, 2001)
Christian Arabs, Too, Are Harassed
(By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, Oct. 15, 2001)
Campuses Split Over Afghanistan
(By JODI WILGOREN, Oct. 15, 2001)
TELEVISION: A Network for Arabs Presents News Coverage With Attitude
(By BLAINE HARDEN, Oct. 15, 2001)
PRECAUTIONS: Experts Offer Guidance on How to Handle Suspicious Mail
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Oct. 15, 2001)
FLORIDA: Media Workers Say Results of Anthrax Test Are Slow
(By DANA CANEDY and DAVID FIRESTONE, Oct. 15, 2001)
FALSE ALARMS: Anthrax Hoaxes Hinder Effort to Cope With Real Threats
(By ERICA GOODE, Oct. 15, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Nature of Foe Is Obstacle in Appealing for Sacrifice
(By R. W. APPLE Jr., Oct. 15, 2001)
AN AMERICAN JOURNAL: Corn Dogs, Funnel Cake and a Pledge to the Flag
(By FRANCIS X. CLINES, Oct. 15, 2001)
WORLD: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 15, 2001)
Biggest Daylight Raids So Far
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 15, 2001)
THE PRESIDENT: President Rejects Offer by Taliban for Negotiations
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Oct. 15, 2001)
THE MONEY: Saudi Denies Charge That He Gave bin Laden Aid
(By NEIL MacFARQUHAR, Oct. 15, 2001)
DAMAGE: In Village Reportedly Struck by U.S. Air Attack, Destruction, Death and Anger
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 15, 2001)
THE FIGHTERS: On Front Line, Boys and Men Wait for the Americans
(By DEXTER FILKINS, Oct. 15, 2001)
NORTHERN ALLIANCE : Without Charismatic General, Rebels Seem to be Trying to Find Their Way
(By DAVID ROHDE, Oct. 15, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: Recruiting a New Afghan Ruler, Bush's 'No' and Tracking Anthrax
(By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Oct. 15, 2001)
NY REGION: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 15, 2001)
EXPOSURE: Missteps Cited in Responding to NBC Scare
(By ERIC LIPTON, Oct. 15, 2001)
Insurance Could Largely Shape the City's Economic Future
(By JOSEPH B. TREASTER & LESLIE EATON, Oct. 15, 2001)
METROPOLITAN DIARY: Dear Diary
(By ENID NEMY, Oct. 15, 2001)
New Yorkers, Walking a Line to Keep Going
(By JOYCE PURNICK, Oct. 15, 2001)
MEMENTOS: With Solemn Detail, Dust of Ground Zero Is Put in Urns
(By AMY WALDMAN, Oct. 15, 2001)
PRECAUTIONS: Experience is Outracing Old Protocols for Anthrax
(By SHAILA K. DEWAN, Oct. 15, 2001)
SPORTS: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 15, 2001)
SPORTS: Jeter Carries the Yanks
(By HARVEY ARATON, Oct. 15, 2001)
ON BASEBALL: A's Take Lost Swing on Perilous Road Trip
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 15, 2001)
Randy Johnson Carries Losing Streak Into Game 1
(By RAFAEL HERMOSO, Oct. 15, 2001)
MARINERS 3, INDIANS 1: Seattle Advances to A.L.C.S.
(By TYLER KEPNER, Oct. 15, 2001)
DIAMONDBACKS 2, ST. LOUIS 1: Arizona Goes to First N.L.C.S.
(By RAFAEL HERMOSO, Oct. 15, 2001)
A's Hope Gant's Bat Can Revive Offense
(By STEVE POPPER, Oct. 15, 2001)
OP-EDS: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 15, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Collaborative Charity
(NY TIMES, Oct. 15, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Future of Afghanistan
(NY TIMES, Oct. 15, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: Living With Fear
(BY BOB HERBERT, Oct. 15, 2001)
OP-ED ESSAY: My Dunno Sheet
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Oct. 15, 2001)
* OP-ED: Condemnation Without Absolutes
(BY STANLEY FISH, Oct. 15, 2001)
OP-ED: The Constituency of Terror
(BY HERNANDO DE SOTO, Oct. 15, 2001)
LETTERS: Fear in America: A Weekend of Anthrax Jitters
(By BARBARA HARTLEY GRIMES et. al., Oct. 15, 2001)
LETTERS: After Sept. 11, New York Is Everywhere
(By ALICEANN WOHLBRUCK et. al., Oct. 15, 2001)
BUSINESS: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 15, 2001)
* THE MEDIA: New Tactic of Terrorists Is to Attack Messengers
(By FELICITY BARRINGER, Oct. 15, 2001)
U.S. Businesses Taking Steps to Protect Company Mail
(By JONATHAN D. GLATER, Oct. 15, 2001)
STOCKPILING: U.S. Moving to Buttress Defense Against the Bioterrorism Threat
(By ANDREW POLLACK, Oct. 15, 2001)
Attacks Expose Telephone's Soft Underbelly
(By SIMON ROMERO, Oct. 15, 2001)
THE MEDIA: In This War, CNN Seeks Definition
(By JIM RUTENBERG, Oct. 15, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Stopping Signals From Satellite TV Proves Difficult
(By SETH SCHIESEL, Oct. 15, 2001)
Magazine Jobless Feel Twice Battered
(By DAVID HANDELMAN, Oct. 15, 2001)
The Book Fair's Impresario [Morgan Entrekin, Grove/Atlantic]
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Oct. 15, 2001)
PATENTS: Watching a Plane From the Ground
(By TERESA RIORDAN, Oct. 15, 2001)
At Global Crossing, It Pays to Be Inside [$61 to 82 cents]
(By GERALDINE FABRIKANT & DAVID CAY JOHNSTON, Oct. 15, 2001)
Anthrax Drug Promoted on Web Sites
(By DIANA B. HENRIQUES, Oct. 15, 2001)
E-COMMERCE REPORT: A Battle for Job Listings
(By BOB TEDESCHI, Oct. 15, 2001)
NEW ECONOMY: Using Humans as a Computer Model
(By STEVE LOHR, Oct. 15, 2001)
COMPRESSED DATA: Area Code Is Listed for Not-Yet-Born State
(By ABBY ELLIN, Oct. 15, 2001)
COMPRESSED DATA: Chief of Compaq Is Quick on His Feet
(By DENNIS BLANK, Oct. 15, 2001)
ARTS: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 15, 2001)
* ARTS ONLINE: How the Net Is Documenting a Watershed Moment
(By MATTHEW MIRAPAUL, Oct. 15, 2001)
ARCHITECTURE: Modern Long Island Icon Is on the 'Endangered' List
(By JULIE V. IOVINE, Oct. 15, 2001)
* BOOKS: A Japanese Writer Analyzes Terrorists and Their Victims
(By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Oct. 15, 2001)
BOOKS: 'AN OLD WIFE'S TALE': Neo-Con Culture Warrior Looks Back With Pride
(By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, Oct. 15, 2001)
FILM: Gothic Thriller With Legs Outlasts the Blockbusters
(By, Oct. 15, 2001)
MUSIC: The Songs of Harlem, Informally Informative
(By ANNE MIDGETTE, Oct. 15, 2001)
MUSIC: AMERICAN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: Music From Dark Times, Catching Europe's Moods
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Oct. 15, 2001)
THEATER: 'RAVE MOM': From Downtown to Tinseltown... and Back
(By BRUCE WEBER, Oct. 15, 2001)
Sunday, October 14, 2001:
On This Day: October 14 (William Penn 10/14/1644-7/30/1718, Francis Lightfoot Lee 10/14/1784-9/29/1833,
Lillian Gish 10/14/1893-2/27/1993, e.e. cummings 10/14/1894-9/3/1962, Roger Moore 1927, Ralph Lauren 1939)
Martin Luther King Wins The Nobel Prize for Peace
(NY Times, October 14, 1964)
Dwight David Eisenhower: A Leader in War and Peace
[born 10/14/1890] (NY Times, March 29, 1969)
Jacqueline Babbin, 80, Producer in Theater, Films and Television, Dies
(By MATT SEDENSKY, Oct. 14, 2001)
Francesco Cordasco, Sociologist, Dies at 80
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Oct. 14, 2001)
Joseph Stein, 89, Architect Noted for Work in India, Is Dead
(By PAUL LEWIS, Oct. 14, 2001)
NATIONAL: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 14, 2001)
WORLD: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 14, 2001)
NY REGION: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 14, 2001)
SPORTS: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 14, 2001)
OP-EDS: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 14, 2001)
BUSINESS: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 14, 2001)
ARTS: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 14, 2001)
STYLE: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 14, 2001)
THE INTELLIGENCE: Failure to Heed Signs of Change in Terror Goals
(By JAMES RISEN with STEPHEN ENGELBERG, Oct. 14, 2001)
Wider Anthrax Reports, but No Link Is Found
(By ERIC LIPTON with JIM RUTENBERG, Oct. 14, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Reconsidering Saudi Arabia
(NY TIMES, Oct. 14, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Kofi Annan's Nobel Prize
(NY TIMES, Oct. 14, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Among the Missing
(NY TIMES, Oct. 14, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: Season of the Witch
(By MAUREEN DOWD, Oct. 14, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: Harvest of Lemons
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, Oct. 14, 2001)
OP-ED: The God of a Diverse People
(By ALAN WOLFE, Oct. 14, 2001)
OP-ED: Afghanistan Can Learn From Its Past
(By NAZIF SHAHRANI, Oct. 14, 2001)
LETTERS: Hijackers, Beware: We Are Ready
(By CHRIS ROBERTS et. al., Oct. 14, 2001)
* Round Table: The New Challenges for Wall Street
(NY TIMES, Oct. 14, 2001)
Fake Goods Are Flowing Under the New Radar
(By JULIAN E. BARNES, Oct. 14, 2001)
A Rush to Biotech, Based on a Scare
(By ANDREW POLLACK, Oct. 14, 2001)
PRIVATE SECTOR: A Web Visionary, Unbowed
(By SUSAN E. REED, Oct. 14, 2001)
INVESTING WITH: James L. Moffett of UMB Scout Worldwide Fund
(By CAROLE GOULD, Oct. 14, 2001)
Playing the Potential in Internet Security
(By JAN M. ROSEN, Oct. 14, 2001)
* MARKET WATCH: Beware Calling a Bottom Too Soon
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Oct. 14, 2001)
* MARKET INSIGHT: Telecom Recovery - A Matter of Time
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Oct. 14, 2001)
ECONOMIC VIEW: Government Spending Is Back. But for What?
(By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Oct. 14, 2001)
PORTFOLIOS, ETC.: A Week of Higher Rates Doesn't Kill a Bond Rally
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Oct. 14, 2001)
MY MONEY, MY LIFE: A Housekeeper Cleaned Up My Act
(By SAUL SCHACHTER, Oct. 14, 2001)
BACKSLASH: Hope in a Land of Hyperbole
(By MATT RICHTEL, Oct. 14, 2001)
PRIVATE SECTOR: Perot's Résumé Addendum: Hedge Fund Manager
(By Danny Hakim, Oct. 14, 2001)
LETTERS: Refilling the Planes, Replenishing the Economy
(By RANDALL C. BOYD et. al., Oct. 14, 2001)
BUSINESS DIARY: Elmo, Still Ticklish, Is Selling Better, Too
(By Julian E. Barnes, Oct. 14, 2001)
PERSONAL BUSINESS DIARY: Many Households Plan a Traditional Halloween
(Compiled by VIVIAN MARINO, Oct. 14, 2001)
* Art Brings Salve for a Wounded People
(By KARAL ANN MARLING, Oct. 14, 2001)
FILM: 'Waking Life': Waking Up While Still Dreaming
(By DAVE KEHR, Oct. 14, 2001)
MUSIC: In Climates of Terror, Songs of a Fleeting Utopia
(By MICHAEL WHITE, Oct. 14, 2001)
* THEATER: Shel Silverstein: A Friend Who Lived Life The Chicago Way
(By DAVID MAMET, Oct. 14, 2001)
STYLE: Voices of the Past: We've Been There, Done That
(BBy ALEX WITCHELy, Oct. 14, 2001)
STYLE: Like It? I Did It Myself, Darling
(By RUTH LA FERLA, Oct. 14, 2001)
VOWS: Lisa Ristow and Mark Polansky
(By JAN JARBOE RUSSELL, Oct. 14, 2001)
WEEK IN REVIEW: Contents
(NY TIMES, Oct. 14, 2001)
* PAST GROUND ZERO: The Distance Traveled in a Month of War
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Oct. 14, 2001)
How to Declare Victory
(By TODD S. PURDUM, Oct. 14, 2001)
Rebuilding What War Has Destroyed
(By JOSEPH KAHN, Oct. 14, 2001)
'A' Is for Animal House
(By ALAN SCHWARZ, Oct. 14, 2001)
Osama Bert Laden
(By AMY HARMON, Oct. 14, 2001)
A War Fought Without Guns
(By DEAN E. MURPHY, Oct. 14, 2001)
The Romance of Air Travel Fear Interrupts a Flight of Fancy
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