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)

Sunday, September 30, 2001:
On This Day: September 30 (Etienne Bonnot Condillac 9/30/1715-8/2/1780, Antoine-Jerome Balard 9/30/1802-3/30/1876, Jean Perrin 9/30/1870-4/17/1942, Hans Geiger 9/30/1882-9/24/1945, Sir Nevill Mott 9/30/1905-8/8/1996, Deborah Kerr 1921, Angie Dickinson 1931, Johnny Mathis 1935, Deborah Allen 1953, Martina Hingis 1980)
Britain and Germany Make Anti-War Pact; Hitler Gets Less Than His Sudeten Demands (NY Times, Sept. 30, 1938)
Truman Capote is Dead at 59; Novelist of Style and Clarity [born 9/30/1924] (By ALBIN KREBS, August 26, 1984)
Nguyen Van Thieu, Former South Vietnamese President, Dies at 78 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 30, 2001)
Michael L. Katzev, Underwater Archaeologist, Dies at 62 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Sep. 30, 2001)
Arsacio Vanegas, Aided Castro's Cause, Dies at 79 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 30, 2001)
THE BIOLOGICAL THREAT: Some See U.S. as Vulnerable in Germ Attack (By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, Sep. 30, 2001)
Bush 'Is My Commander,' Gore Declares in Call for Unity (By RICHARD L. BERKE, Sep. 30, 2001)
THE CANDIDATES: New Kind of Politics Reflects New Mood (By RICHARD L. BERKE, Sep. 30, 2001)
POLITICAL BRIEFINGS: From Waging War To Waging Politics? (By B. DRUMMOND AYRES JR., Sep. 30, 2001)
Protesters Urge Peace With Terrorists (NY TIMES, Sep. 30, 2001)
Intelligence Analyst Charged With Spying for Cuba (By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS, Sep. 30, 2001)
* SAN FRANCISCO JOURNAL: Home Run Race Gives a City Reason to Cheer (By EVELYN NIEVES, Sep. 30, 2001)
* THE ROLE OF RELIGION: Scholars Call Attacks a Distortion of Islam (By LAURIE GOODSTEIN, Sep. 30, 2001)
* Campus Culture Wars Flare Anew (By ANEMONA HARTOCOLLIS, Sep. 30, 2001)
AIRPORT SECURITY: Boston Airport Closes Terminal After Breach (By ERIC SCHMITT, Sep. 30, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: British Accuse Algerian of Role in Attacks (By RAYMOND BONNER, Sep. 30, 2001)
* IN PROFILE: Bin Laden's Journey From Rich Pious Lad to the Mask of Evil (By ROBERT D. McFADDEN, Sep. 30, 2001)
INTELLIGENCE: U.S. Pursued Secret Efforts to Catch or Kill bin Laden (By JAMES RISEN, Sep. 30, 2001)
THE FAMILY: Fearing Harm, Bin Laden Kin Fled From U.S. (By PATRICK E. TYLER, Sep. 30, 2001)
BIN LADEN'S NETWORK: Al Qaeda Is a Sprawling, Hard-to-Spot Web of Terrorists-in-Waiting (By BENJAMIN WEISER & TIM GOLDEN, Sep. 30, 2001)
MILITARY: Large U.S. Force in Afghan Area Gives the Option to Strike at Will (By STEVEN LEE MYERS & THOM SHANKER, Sep. 30, 2001)
THE STREETS: Hatred of U.S. Burns in Pakistan's Biggest City (By RICK BRAGG, Sep. 30, 2001)
* NEWS ANALYSIS: China's Support for U.S. on Terror Is a Dramatic About-Face (By ERIK ECKHOLM, Sep. 30, 2001)
Under Siege, Chirac Gets Political Lift From Crisis (By SUZANNE DALEY, Sep. 30, 2001)
Antiterror Coalition Will Be Shifting, Loose and Anything but Grand (By DOUGLAS JEHL, Sep. 30, 2001)
PUBLIC LIVES: A Pakistani Diplomat, Staying Calm in the Storm's Eye (By PHILIP SHENON, Sep. 30, 2001)
REFUGEES: Fear and Misery for Afghan Refugees (By DOUGLAS FRANTZ, Sep. 30, 2001)
ISLAMABAD: An Artful Denial From Pakistan on the Presence of U.S. Troops (By JOHN F. BURNS, Sep. 30, 2001)
Happy Ending, but Rights Issue Casts Shadow on Royal Romance (By MARLISE SIMONS, Sep. 30, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 30, 2001)
* NY REGION: Fire Dept. Asks If There Are Some Fires It Shouldn't Fight (By CHRIS HEDGES, Sep. 30, 2001)
* Near Ground Zero, Trinity Parish's Historic Spires Are Unbowed (By DAVID W. DUNLAP, Sep. 30, 2001)
WAITING: As Talk of War Heats Up, an Afghan Neighborhood Is Chilled (By DENNY LEE, Sep. 30, 2001)
THE SCENE: A Ground Zero Diary: 12 Days of Fire, Fear and Grit (By C. J. CHIVERS, Sep. 30, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Remaking the Military (NY TIMES, Sep. 30, 2001)
* EDITORIAL: Choosing the Sex of Your Baby (NY TIMES, Sep. 30, 2001)
* EDITORIAL OBSERVER: Cultural Predictions in the Wake of the Terrorist Attack (By VERLYN KLINKENBORG, Sep. 30, 2001)
* OP-ED: LIBERTIES: We Love the Liberties They Hate (By MAUREEN DOWD, Sep. 30, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: The Hitchhiker Syndrome (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Sep. 30, 2001)
OP-ED: A Post-Disaster Economy in Need of Repair (By ROBERT E. RUBIN, Sep. 30, 2001)
OP-ED: Islam and the Opposition to Terrorism (By ROY MOTTAHEDEH, Sep. 30, 2001)
LETTERS: A Monument to the Towers of Pain and Might (By ANDREW KRYZAK et. al., Sep. 30, 2001)
BUSINESS: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 30, 2001)
* Many Once-Thriving Cities Are Suddenly Hurting (By MARY WILLIAMS WALSH, Sep. 30, 2001)
Sales Drop and Spending Crawls as Uncertainty Grips Economy (By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Sep. 30, 2001)
Traumatized Workers Look for Healing on the Job (By ABBY ELLIN, Sep. 30, 2001)
* After the Fall, a Tech Star Stays Scrappy (By STEVE LOHR, Sep. 30, 2001)
A Company Faces a Calamity's Personal Side [TJ-Max] (By CONSTANCE L. HAYS, Sep. 30, 2001)
Oil, Politics and the New Global Fault Lines (By NEELA BANERJEE, Sep. 30, 2001)
MARKET WATCH: Diversify? Yes, It Still Makes Sense (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Sep. 30, 2001)
* Forecasters Try to Assess the Terror Factor (By JOANNE LEGOMSKY, Sep. 30, 2001)
A Security Virtuoso's Big Test (By LARA PETUSKY COGER, Sep. 30, 2001)
ECONOMIC VIEW: Mourn the Dead, but Not New York (By TOM REDBURN, Sep. 30, 2001)
FIVE QUESTIONS FOR CARLSON NELSON: Now Make the Traveler Want to Travel (By JULIE FLAHERTY, Sep. 30, 2001)
Identifying the Dead, 2,000 Miles Away (By ANDREW POLLACK, Sep. 30, 2001)
MARKET INSIGHT: Beyond the Gloom, Some Value in Utilities (By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Sep. 30, 2001)
* STRATEGIES: At Least One Stock Market Signal Is Flashing Green (By MARK HULBERT, Sep. 30, 2001)
MY MONEY, MY LIFE: A Home Office Needs Its Boundaries (By LORI GOTTLIEB, Sep. 30, 2001)
Old and New Ways to Write a Will (By SUSAN STELLIN, Sep. 30, 2001)
INVESTING WITH: Harold J. Levy and David L. Cohen: First Eagle Fund of America (By CAROLE GOULD, Sep. 30, 2001)
Focused on Basics, Dollar Stores May Show Strength (By ELIZABETH KELLEHER, Sep. 30, 2001)
Private Sector: Once Forlorn and Forgotten, Now a Lobbyist's Cause (Compiled by RICK GLADSTONE, Sep. 30, 2001)
Business Diary: Above the Ground, Some Muddy Geography (By Julie Dunn, Sep. 30, 2001)
* Investing Diary: A Quick Rebound in Bullish Sentiment (Compiled by Steven P. Rosenfeld , Sep. 30, 2001)
Personal Business Diary: Buying American as a Crisis Response (Compiled by Vivian Marino , Sep. 30, 2001)
ARTS: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 30, 2001)
ARTS: Filling the Void: A Chance to Soar (By HERBERT MUSCHAMP, Sep. 30, 2001)
* STYLE: Being Single' in New York Is a Little Lonelier Now (By GINIA BELLAFANTE, Sep. 30, 2001)
VIEWS: New TV Shows Are Getting Under My Skin (By BRUCE WEBER, Sep. 30, 2001)
* A Very Different Laura Bush (By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Sep. 30, 2001)
OFF OFF FIFTH: Nothing Chapeau Is Alien to Her (By RUTH LA FERLA, Sep. 30, 2001)
NOTICED: The Tattooed Badge of Courage (By SHAILA K. DEWAN, Sep. 30, 2001)
MIRROR, MIRROR: The Nine Lives of Newport's Antiques (By PENELOPE GREEN, Sep. 30, 2001)
ON THE STREET: Colors [Slide Show] (Photographs By BILL CUNNINGHAM, Sep. 30, 2001)
VOWS: Lori Silverbush and Tom Colicchio (By JENNY ALLEN, Sep. 30, 2001)
WEEK IN REVIEW: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 30, 2001)
* An Act of Terror Reshapes the Globe (By MICHAEL WINES, Sep. 30, 2001)
A War Without D-Days or 4-F's or Riveters (By R. W. APPLE Jr., Sep. 30, 2001)
Will the Court Reassert National Authority? (By LINDA GREENHOUSE, Sep. 30, 2001)
Who Will Fight This War? (By THOM SHANKER, Sep. 30, 2001)
Now, Government Is the Solution, Not the Problem (By ROBIN TONER, Sep. 30, 2001)
* PUT 'EM UP: Flag Fever: the Paradox of Patriotism (By BLAINE HARDEN, Sep. 30, 2001)
POLITICS AND PIETY: The Vatican on Just Wars (By MELINDA HENNEBERGER, Sep. 30, 2001)
1984 + 17: Crisis Monitoring (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Sep. 30, 2001)
Two Mayors? It's a Thought (By ADAM NAGOURNEY, Sep. 30, 2001)
WORD FOR WORD: Islam's Argument: Iran Gets Its Two Cents' Worth (By ELAINE SCIOLINO, Sep. 30, 2001)
SUNDAY MAGAZINE: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 30, 2001)
* ON LANGUAGE: Every Conflict Generates Its Own Lexicon (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Sep. 30, 2001)
Liberal Skeptics Now Know the Deep Emotions of Patriotism (By GEORGE PACKER, Sep. 30, 2001)
* The Fear Economy (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Sep. 30, 2001)
* Air Travel: Routine No More (By PHILIP SHENON, Sep. 30, 2001)
Fewer Passengers, Fewer Flight (By DAVID CAY JOHNSTON, Sep. 30, 2001)
TRAVEL ESSAY: After the Attacks, an Odysseys Begins (By JON MARGOLIS, Sep. 30, 2001)
TRAVEL ESSAY: The Long Way Home (By WILLIAM McCLOSKEY, Sep. 30, 2001)
King Arthur and Robin Hood, Yosemite (NY TIMES, Sep. 30, 2001)
Zeppelin Flies Again, and the Lines Are Forming (By CORINNE LaBALME, Sep. 30, 2001)
* FRUGAL TRAVELER: Tea, Temples and Hot Spots in Old Kyoto (By DAISANN McLANE, Sep. 30, 2001)
Kyoto: Lodging, Dining and Sightseeing Information (By, Sep. 30, 2001)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 30, 2001)
David Halberstam, 'War in a Time of Peace': The 90's Wars (By JANE PERLEZ, Sep. 30, 2001)
'The Beauty of the Husband': Anne Carson's Elusive Tangos (By DAPHNE MERKIN, Sep. 30, 2001)

Saturday, September 29, 2001:
On This Day: September 29 (Francois Boucher 9/29/1703-5/30/1770, Horatio Nelson 9/29/1758-10/21/1805, Greer Garson 9/29/1904-4/6/1996, Trevor Howard 9/29/1916-1/7/1988, Michelangelo Antonioni 9/29/1912)
New York Giants: 1883-1957 Last Game at Polo Grounds (NY Times, September 29, 1957)
Enrico Fermi Dead at 53; Architect of Atomic Bomb [born 9/29/1901] (NY Times, November 29, 1954)
Clark T. Rogerson, Expert on Fungi, Is Dead at 82 (By CARLA BARANAUCKAS, Sep. 29, 2001)
A. Joseph Debe, Creator of Unusual Stock Derivative, Is Dead at 73 (By ALEX BERENSON, Sep. 29, 2001)
Ezra Ehrenkrantz, Architect, is Dead at 69 (By ERIC PACE, Sep. 29, 2001)
Evan Lottman, Film Editor, Dies at 70 (NY TIMES, Sep. 29, 2001)
Victor Wong, Character Actor, Dies at 74 (NY TIMES, Sep. 29, 2001)
Robert Abel, Computer Animator, Dies at 64 (NY TIMES, Sep. 29, 2001)
AIR TRAVELERS: More Passengers and Tighter Screening Bring Congestion (By JERE LONGMAN, Sep. 29, 2001)
THE PRESIDENT: Bush Considering Plan for Limited Reopening of Reagan Airport
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER & MATTHEW L. WALD, Sep. 29, 2001)
THE SUPREME COURT: O'Connor Foresees Limits on Freedom (By LINDA GREENHOUSE, Sep. 29, 2001)
* THE PILOTS: F.B.I. Focuses on Navigational Device (By JIM YARDLEY, Sep. 29, 2001)
* THE LETTER: Injunctions to Pray, Instructions to Kill (By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, Sep. 29, 2001)
Excerpts From Notes Found After the Hijackings (NY TIMES, Sep. 29, 2001)
Full Text of Notes Found After Hijackings (NY TIMES, Sep. 29, 2001)
THE AIRLINES: Disturbance Causes Flight to Be Diverted (By BARBARA WHITAKER, Sep. 29, 2001)
THE ARRESTS: Detainees Accounts of Investigation Are at Odds With Official Reports (By WILLIAM GLABERSON, Sep. 29, 2001)
Lack of Device To Scan ID's May Muddle Mexico Border (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 29, 2001)
* BELIEFS: Scholars Are Challenged to Influence Change Without Compromising (By PETER STEINFELS, Sep. 29, 2001)
R.O.T.C.: War on Terrorism Inspires a Renewed Sense of Purpose (By JACQUES STEINBERG, Sep. 29, 2001)
Events on Distant Shores Keep Hawaii's Beaches Bare (By DAVID W. CHEN, Sep. 29, 2001)
SAN GABRIEL JOURNAL: A Cool Tea Heats Up Night Life for Asians (By DAVID W. CHEN, Sep. 29, 2001)
* Response to Attack Splits Arabs in the West (By PATRICIA COHEN, Sep. 29, 2001)
CHEMICAL HAZARDS: Center Is Round-the-Clock Guard for Chemical Threats (By MATTHEW L. WALD, Sep. 29, 2001)
* THE WHITE HOUSE: President Says U.S. Is in 'Hot Pursuit' of Terror Group (By DAVID E. SANGER & STEVEN LEE MYERS, Sep. 29, 2001)
GERMAN INTELLIGENCE: German Data Led U.S. to Search for More Hijackers After Attack
(By JOHN TAGLIABUE & RAYMOND BONNER, Sep. 29, 2001)
THE NORTHERN ALLIANCE: Front-Line Taliban Foes Eager to Help U.S. (By DAVID ROHDE, Sep. 29, 2001)
* THE STRATEGY: A War on a Small Scale, Possibly Long and Risky (By MICHAEL R. GORDON & ERIC SCHMITT, Sep. 29, 2001)
* THE VETERANS: Russians Recall the 'Giant Mincer' That Was Afghanistan (By MICHAEL WINES, Sep. 29, 2001)
AFGHANISTAN: Pakistanis Fail in Bid to Persuade Taliban to Turn Over bin Laden (By JOHN F. BURNS, Sep. 29, 2001)
AID: U.S. Prepares Big Packages of Assistance for Its Allies (By JANE PERLEZ, Sep. 29, 2001)
So Far, Europe Breathes Easier Over Free Hand Given the U.S. (By STEVEN ERLANGER, Sep. 29, 2001)
QUETTA JOURNAL: Giving Proper Burial to Holy Books (By DOUGLAS FRANTZ, Sep. 29, 2001)
Berlusconi Stands by Remarks on Islam (By MELINDA HENNEBERGER, Sep. 29, 2001)
NY REGION: Rebuff of Term Extension Has Giuliani Thinking
(By JENNIFER STEINHAUER & JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr., Sep. 29, 2001)
EMERGENCY RESPONSE: After a Bunker Proves Vulnerable, Officials Rethink Emergency Response
(By AL BAKER & KEVIN FLYNN, Sep. 29, 2001)
THE SITE: Engineers Seek to Test Steel Before It Is Melted for Reuse (By JAMES GLANZ and KENNETH CHANG, Sep. 29, 2001)
Plants May Rise for a Concrete-Starved Manhattan (By CHARLES V. BAGLI, Sep. 29, 2001)
THE MISSING: From Heights of Trade Center to Lawns of Suburbia, Shattered Dreams (NY TIMES, Sep. 29, 2001)
No Threats to Bridges, City Officials Say (NY TIMES, Sep. 29, 2001)
NOTEBOOKS: Security Cameras Planned for Mall in Trade Center Ruins (By RICHARD LEZIN JONES, Sep. 29, 2001)
A FUNERAL: F.B.I. Expert on bin Laden and Terrorism Is Mourned (By DAVID KOCIENIEWSKI, Sep. 29, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 29, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 29, 2001)
* THE MARKETS: Stocks End Week Higher, but Quarter Was Painful
[Dow +166, Nasdaq -31] (By MICHAEL BRICK, Sep. 29, 2001)
At Home Says It Will Seek Chapter 11 Protection (By MATT RICHTEL, Sep. 29, 2001)
Economy Still Teetering Near Recession, Data Show (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Sep. 29, 2001)
THE AIRPORTS: Thousands of Jobs at Stake as Terminal Shops Struggle (By JOE SHARKEY, Sep. 29, 2001)
* Founder of Wall Street Fund Steps Into Brother's Shoes (By RIVA D. ATLAS with GERALDINE FABRIKANT, Sep. 29, 2001)
THE BANKS: Bank of New York Estimates Its Loss Will Be $125 Million (By SAUL HANSELL, Sep. 29, 2001)
Judge Orders Talks to Settle Microsoft Case (By STEPHEN LABATON, Sep. 29, 2001)
* ARTS: THINK TANK: In New War on Terrorism, Words Are Weapons, Too (By CELESTINE BOHLEN, Sep. 29, 2001)
FILM: 'WHAT TIME IS IT THERE?': A Man Who Sells Watches Must Endure a Test of Time
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Sep. 29, 2001)
FILM: 'I'M GOING HOME': The Long View From the End of Life (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Sep. 29, 2001)
MUSIC: A Lennon Tribute Revived (NY TIMES, Sep. 29, 2001)
* MUSIC: 'ARTS AND SPIRITUALITY': The Liszt Who Contradicts His Popular Flashy Persona
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Sep. 29, 2001)
MUSIC: 'ANONYMOUS 4': Going From Divine Love to the Secular Variety (By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Sep. 29, 2001)
TV CRITIC: Two New Spy Series at Unexpected Risk (By JULIE SALAMON, Sep. 29, 2001)

Friday, September 28, 2001:
On This Day: September 28 (Georges Clemenceau 9/28/1841-11/24/1929, William Paley 9/28/1901-10/26/1990, Al Capp 9/28/1909-11/5/1979, Marcello Mastroianni 9/28/1924-12/19/1996, Brigitte Bardot 9/28/1934)
Fliers At Seattle End World Flight of 27,000 Miles (NY Times, September 28, 1924)
Ed Sullivan Is Dead at 73; Charmed Millions on TV [born 9/28/1901] (NY Times, October 14, 1974)
Charles Cannell Is Dead at 88; Improved Survey Accuracy (By ERIC PACE, Sep. 28, 2001)
Stanley Herr, 56, Dies; Advocate of Retarded (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Sep. 28, 2001)
Maurice Rifkin, TV Producer, Dies at 88 (NY TIMES, Sep. 28, 2001)
THE PRESIDENT: Bush to Increase Federal Role in Security at Airports (By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Sep. 28, 2001)
* THE FORMER PRESIDENTS: From the Outside, Former Presidents Lend Support (By RICHARD L. BERKE, Sep. 28, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: Document That May Have Been Used to Prepare for Attacks Is Reported Found
(By NEIL A. LEWIS & DAVID JOHNSTON, Sep. 28, 2001)
* Excerpts From Letter Thought to Be Instructions (NY TIMES, Sep. 28, 2001)
WASHINGTON TALK: Bush Law-Enforcement Plan Troubles Both Right and Left (By ROBIN TONER, Sep. 28, 2001)
Reports of Scams Preying on Donors Are on Rise (By MELODY PETERSEN, Sep. 28, 2001)
Changed Political Climate May Aid Florida Governor (By DANA CANEDY, Sep. 28, 2001)
THE NATIONAL GUARD: Bush Proposal Is Welcomed by Governors and Travelers (By KATE ZERNIKE, Sep. 28, 2001)
HOMELAND SECURITY: New Office to Become a White House Agency (By ELIZABETH BECKER & TIM WEINER, Sep. 28, 2001)
THE LAWYER: Defending Muslims in Court and Drawing Death Threats as Well as a High Profile
(By WILLIAM GLABERSON, Sep. 28, 2001)
AIR SECURITY: New Powers to Down Jets Is Last Resort, Rumsfeld Says (By ERIC SCHMITT, Sep. 28, 2001)
School Colors Become Red, White and Blue (By KEVIN SACK, Sep. 28, 2001)
* After Life of Frugality, Woman Gives $3.5 Million (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 28, 2001)
* SPEECH AND EXPRESSION: In Patriotic Time, Dissent Is Muted (By BILL CARTER & FELICITY BARRINGER, Sep. 28, 2001)
Recalling Internment and Saying 'Never Again' (By EVELYN NIEVES, Sep. 28, 2001)
* CHOICE OF WORDS: In a Military Town, Osama's Place Cafe Is Tasting Tolerance (By STEPHEN KINZER, Sep. 28, 2001)
OVER HERE: At a Waiting College Campus, an Echo of the 60's (By FRANCIS X. CLINES, Sep. 28, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 28, 2001)
THE EMISSARY: Jesse Jackson Says He Might Go to Taliban to Seek Turnaround (By RAYMOND HERNANDEZ, Sep. 28, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 28, 2001)
* TRANSPORTATION: Subway by Trade Center to Take Years to Rebuild (By RANDY KENNEDY, Sep. 28, 2001)
Giuliani Presses for Time, and 2 Candidates Agree and 1 Does Not (By DAN BARRY, Sep. 28, 2001)
8,000 Residents, Still Displaced, Grow Frustrated and Then Angry (By BRUCE LAMBERT, Sep. 28, 2001)
Most Passenger Seats Are Occupied as Gates Are Closed to Solo Drivers (By ALAN FEUER, Sep. 28, 2001)
Ads' Message to Tourists: Come Back! (By JAYSON BLAIR, Sep. 28, 2001)
THE MISSING: Dancing Their Way Through Life, With a Laugh and a 'Woo-hooo!' (NY TIMES, Sep. 28, 2001)
* THE LADDER COMPANY: In Stopping to Save Woman, Rescuers Saved Themselves (By N. R. KLEINFIELD, Sep. 28, 2001)
With War in the Air, Home Is but a Dream [Mexico's migrant men] (By CHARLIE LeDUFF, Sep. 28, 2001)
CHANGED LIVES: In a Shattered City, the Construction Leader Is King (By CHARLIE LeDUFF, Sep. 28, 2001)
Destroyed Computer Links Leave Thousands of Poor People Without Welfare Benefits (By NINA BERNSTEIN, Sep. 28, 2001)
THE BIG CITY: Most Heroes Would Leave. Not Giuliani. (By JOHN TIERNEY, Sep. 28, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 28, 2001)
THE MARKETS: Big Companies' Shares Rally on Hopes They Offer Safety (By MICHAEL BRICK, Sep. 28, 2001)
* FLOYD NORRIS: Financial Magic Looked Good, but Left Companies Weak (By FLOYD NORRIS, Sep. 28, 2001)
* THE MARKETS: Doubt Over Whether Advance Knowledge of Attacks Was Used for Profit (By KURT EICHENWALD & EDMUND L. ANDREWS, Sep. 28, 2001)
* Cellular Pioneer Puts Up 'For Sale' Signs (By GERALDINE FABRIKANT & GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Sep. 28, 2001)
Layoffs Push Jobless Claims to 9-Year High (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Sep. 28, 2001)
ARTS: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 28, 2001)
* ART REVIEW: BRUEGEL: Explaining It All for You (By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Sep. 28, 2001)
* ART: ALFRED JENSEN: Overpowering Colors and Dizzying Theories (By GRACE GLUECK, Sep. 28, 2001)
ART: Funky Digs With Lots of Space for Performance-Oriented Hipsters (By ROBERTA SMITH, Sep. 28, 2001)
ART: Idealism and Spirit in Visions of Modernism, South American Style (By HOLLAND COTTER, Sep. 28, 2001)
INSIDE ART: An Opening Faces Delay (NY TIMES, Sep. 28, 2001)
* ANTIQUES: Le Corbusier Saw Tapestry as Part of Art (By WENDY MOONAN, Sep. 28, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'THE PRACTICAL HEART': Emotional Terrain, Mapped From the Inside Out (By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Sep. 28, 2001)
FILM: 'ZOOLANDER': A Lost Boy in a Plot to Keep the Fashion Industry Afloat (By ELVIS MITCHELL, Sep. 28, 2001)
FILM: 'DON'T SAY A WORD': A Psychiatrist's Day of Stress and Distress (By A. O. SCOTT, Sep. 28, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 28, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 28, 2001)
MUSIC: First Requiems, Then Resolve (By ALLAN KOZINN, Sep. 28, 2001)
OPERA: 'EUGENE ONEGIN': A Spare Setting for a World-Weary Dandy (By ANNE MIDGETTE, Sep. 28, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY: KENRO IZU: Capturing the Serenity Where Turmoil Reigns (By MARGARETT LOKE, Sep. 28, 2001)
THEATER: 'KISS ME KATE': There's No Letting Up (By BEN BRANTLEY, Sep. 28, 2001)
TV WEEKEND: Viewing New York's Past (By CARYN JAMES, Sep. 28, 2001)

Thursday, September 27, 2001:
On This Day: September 27 (Cosimo de Medici 9/27/1389-8/1/1464, Samuel Adams 9/27/1722-10/2/1803, Sir Harry Blackstone 9/27/1885-11/16/1965, Sir Martin Ryle 9/27/1918-10/14/1984)
Warren Commission Finds Oswald Guilty: Assassin & Ruby Acted Alone (By Anthony Lewis, Sept. 27, 1964)
Admiral Mahan, Naval Critic, Dies at 74 [born 9/26/1897] (NY Times, December 2, 1914)
Fred V. Morrone, 63, Is Dead; Led Port Authority Police (By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Sep. 27, 2001)
Adm. Daniel J. Murphy, Former Deputy Director of C.I.A., 79, Is Dead (By ERIC PACE, Sep. 27, 2001)
David Santiago, 49, Leader in Fight Over Public Housing, Dies (NY TIMES, Sep. 27, 2001)
Ralph Hoar, Campaigner for Consumer Product Safety, Dies at 56 (By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 27, 2001)
John Strauss, Hollywood Publicist, 88, Is Dead (By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, Sep. 27, 2001)
Lord Shore of Stepney, Trade Minister, 77, Is Dead (By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, Sep. 27, 2001)
Shawn Walsh, 46, College Hockey Coach at Maine, Dies (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 27, 2001)
* MARKET PLACE: What's Eating Those Giant Media Stocks? (By SETH SCHIESEL, Sep. 27, 2001)
CIRCUITS: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 27, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 27, 2001)

Wednesday, September 26, 2001:
On This Day: September 26 (Moses Mendelssohn 9/26/1729-1/4/1786, Jean-Louis Gericault 9/26/1791-1/26/1824, T.S. Eliot 9/26/1888-1/4/1965, Martin Heidegger 9/26/1889-5/26/1976, Charles Munch 9/26/1891-11/6/1968, George Gershwin 9/26/1898-7/11/1937)
Nixon & Kennedy Clash in TV Debate on Spending, Farms and Social Issues (By Russell Baker, September 26, 1960)
Pope Paul VI Is Dead of a Heart Attack at 80 [born 9/26/1897] (By KENNETH A. BRIGGS, August 7, 1978)
THE TRADING FIRM: Some Families Doubt Sincerity of Cantor (By DIANA B. HENRIQUES, Sep. 26, 2001)
Dr. Nguyen Ton Hoan, Pro-Independence Vietnamese Official, Is Dead (By PAUL LEWIS, Sep. 26, 2001)
Germaine BrÉe, a Scholar of Modern French Literature, Dies at 93 (NY TIMES, Sep. 26, 2001)
Jens Nygaard, the Quixotic Conductor of the Jupiter Symphony, Dies at 69 (By ALLAN KOZINN, Sep. 26, 2001)
Maxwell Tretter, 95, Executive at New York Housing Authority, Dies (By ERIC PACE, Sep. 26, 2001)
Bill Stafford, Pitcher, Dies at 63 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 26, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 26, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 26, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 26, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 26, 2001)

Tuesday, September 25, 2001:
On This Day: September 25 (Mark Rothko 9/25/1903-2/25/1970, Dmitry Shostakovich 9/25/1906-8/9/1975, Glenn Gould 9/25/1932-10/4/1982, Phil Rizzuto 9/25/1918, Barbara Walter, 9/25/1931, Michael Douglas 9/25/44)
President Eisenhower Sends Troops to Little Rock (By ANTHONY LEWIS, September 25, 1957)
Faulkner's Home, Family and Heritage Were Genesis of Yoknapatawpha County
[born 9/25/1897] (NY Times, July 7, 1962)
David Alger, Manager of Mutual Funds, Is Dead at 57 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Sep. 25, 2001)
Edmund J. Cambridge, Stage Director, Dead at 80 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 25, 2001)
George Bradley, Baseball Executive, Dies at 58 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 25, 2001)
Sallie Wheeler, Who Led Horse Show Back to New York, Dies at 70 (By MATT SEDENSKY, Sep. 25, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: U.S. Is Chasing German Leads on Terror Trail (By LOWELL BERGMAN & DON VAN NATTA Jr., Sep. 25, 2001)
THE POLL: Poll Finds Support for War and Fear on Economy (By RICHARD L. BERKE & JANET ELDER, Sep. 25, 2001)
THE AIRLINES: Pilots Will Ask for Permission to Carry Guns (By MATTHEW L. WALD, Sep. 25, 2001)
WASHINGTON TALK: With Bipartisan Zeal, Rival House Leaders Bond (By LIZETTE ALVAREZ, Sep. 25, 2001)
* Talk Radio, a Medium Noted for Vitriol, Shows Some Restraint (By TIMOTHY EGAN, Sep. 25, 2001)
* THE FARMERS: Battle Against Terroism Has an Agricultural Price (By JODI WILGOREN, Sep. 25, 2001)
* AVIATION PRECAUTIONS: Crop-Dusters Are Grounded on Fears of Toxic Attacks (By DANA CANEDY, Sep. 25, 2001)
THE CAPITAL: A City Transformed, Caught in the Limbo of a New Twilight War (By TODD S. PURDUM, Sep. 25, 2001)
THE MONEY TRACK: Bush Freezes Assets Linked to Terror Network (By DAVID E. SANGER & JOSEPH KAHN, Sep. 25, 2001)
U.S. to Send Wheat to Afghan Refugees (NY TIMES, Sep. 25, 2001)
THE FINANCIERS: 27 Whose Assets Will Be Frozen Are the First of Many, an Official Says
(By JUDITH MILLER, Sep. 25, 2001)
BUSINESS: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 25, 2001)
THE MARKETS: Energy Prices Tumble, but Stocks Soar Worldwide
[Dow +56, Nasdaq +2] (By ALEX BERENSON & JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Sep. 25, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: Even Yielding 3%, Money Market Funds Appeal to Many (By DANNY HAKIM, Sep. 25, 2001)
Disputes on Electronic Message Encryption Take On New Urgency (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Sep. 25, 2001)
AOL, Blaming Terrorist Attacks, Lowers Outlook (By SETH SCHIESEL, Sep. 25, 2001)
THE AIRLINES: Air Carriers Remain Reluctant to Lower Passenger Fares (By LAURENCE ZUCKERMAN & JOE SHARKEY, Sep. 25, 2001)
THE RAILROAD: Newly Popular in Disaster's Wake, Amtrak Seeks U.S. Aid (By ANTHONY DePALMA, Sep. 25, 2001)
THE COMPETITOR: Southwest Has Best Chance to Maintain Profitability (By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr., Sep. 25, 2001)
THE DESTINATIONS: Empty Hotels and Ships Offering Lots of Discounts (By MILT FREUDENHEIM, Sep. 25, 2001)
THE INSURERS: Sales Are Resumed for Coverage of Airlines for Terror Damage (By JOSEPH B. TREASTER, Sep. 25, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Saudi Arabia's Moment (NY TIMES, Sep. 25, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Terrorism Game Theory (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Sep. 25, 2001)
Liberties in a Time of Fear (By DAVID COLE, Sep. 25, 2001)
How to Protect the Homeland (By JOSEPH S. NYE, Sep. 25, 2001)
The Iconic Power of an Artifact (By PHILIPPE DE MONTEBELLO, Sep. 25, 2001)
LETTERS: An Atmosphere Charged With Anger and Fear (By BRYAN LEE et. al., Sep. 25, 2001)
Isaac Stern: The Man and the Music Were One (By MICHAEL KERNAN, Sep. 25, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 25, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 25, 2001)

Monday, September 24, 2001:
On This Day: September 24 (Albrecht Wallenstein 9/24/1583-2/25/1634, John Marshall 9/24/1755-7/6/1835, Mark Hanna 9/24/1837-2/15/1904, Sir A. P. Herbert 9/24/1890-11/11/1971, Stephen Bechtel 9/24/1900-3/14/1989, Severo Ochoa 9/24/1905-11/1/1993, Svetlana Beriosova 9/24/1932-11/10/1998, Jim Henson 9/24/1936-5/16/1990, Jim McKay 1921, Sheila MacRae 1924, Josph Kennedy II 1952)
Clinton, at U.N., Signs Treaty Banning All Nuclear Testing (By ALISON MITCHELL, September 24, 1996)
* Scott Fitzgerald, Author, Dies at 44 [9/24/1896-12/21/1940] (NY Times, December 23, 1940)
Sally F. Reston, Journalist and Photographer, Dies at 89 (By DAVID W. DUNLAP, Sep. 24, 2001)
Lynn Payer Dies at 56; Wrote of Culture and Medicine (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Sep. 24, 2001)
THE SPECIAL FORCES: Eerie Quiet as 'Screaming Eagles' Await Battle Orders (By JAMES DAO, Sep. 24, 2001)
THE TROOPS: Waiting for an Alert to Become an Order (By STEPHEN KINZER, Sep. 24, 2001)
THE CONSUMERS: Recession's Harbinger Is a Missouri City Not Prone to Boom or Bust (By PETER T. KILBORN, Sep. 24, 2001)
War on Terrorism Stirs Memory of Internment (By WILLIAM GLABERSON, Sep. 24, 2001)
The Airports: Democratic Leaders Say They Back a Government Takeover of Security (By MATTHEW L. WALD, Sep. 24, 2001)
A Snapshot Gives Bush 90% Approval (By REUTERS, Sep. 24, 2001)
Changes Called Likely in Policy on Immigration (By SUSAN SACHS, Sep. 24, 2001)
AN AMERICAN JOURNAL: In the Nation's Heartland, Local Angles on the Terror (By FRANCIS X. CLINES, Sep. 24, 2001)
COMPLEX PROBLEM: Groups Could Help Find bin Laden and Assist American Attacks (By MICHAEL R. GORDON & ERIC SCHMITT, Sep. 24, 2001)
U.S. to Publish Terror Evidence on bin Laden (By JANE PERLEZ & TIM WEINER, Sep. 24, 2001)
Saudis Feeling the Pain of Giving Support to U.S (By PATRICK E. TYLER, Sep. 24, 2001)
THE INTELLIGENCE: U.S. Certain That bin Laden Remains Inside Afghanistan (By JAMES RISEN, Sep. 24, 2001)
* NY REGION: THE SERVICE: In a Stadium of Heroes, Prayers for the Fallen
(By ROBERT D. McFADDEN, Sep. 24, 2001)
ANXIETY: Disquiet in New York: A Siren's Wail Can Bring Shudders (By N. R. KLEINFIELD, Sep. 24, 2001)
THE SITE: At the Scene of Random Devastation, a Most Orderly Mission (By DAN BARRY, Sep. 24, 2001)
THE CLEARINGHOUSE: Service Center Cuts Red Tape for Victims of Terrorism (By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA, Sep. 24, 2001)
MAYORAL RACE: Giuliani May Try to Keep Job After Term Ends in December (By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Sep. 24, 2001)
A Familiar Anguish Revisited (By MIRTA OJITO, Sep. 24, 2001)
METRO MATTERS: Like Life, the Vote Goes On (By JOYCE PURNICK, Sep. 24, 2001)
WEST SIDE JOURNAL: Hot Chow on the Hudson? All Aboard (By SHAILA K. DEWAN, Sep. 24, 2001)
CABBIES: Taxi Drivers Say They Risk Bias Attacks and Loss of Income if They Continue to Work
(By RANDY KENNEDY, Sep. 24, 2001)
ARAB-AMERICANS: A Request for Patience if the Law Overreaches (By DAVID M. HALBFINGER, Sep. 24, 2001)
The F.B.I.: From a Makeshift Base, Trying to Run a Smooth Terrorism Investigation (By WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM, Sep. 24, 2001)
NOTEBOOKS: Drinking to the Rescuers, and Getting Autographs (By AMY WALDMAN, Sep. 24, 2001)
THE MISSING: Dedicated to New York, Their Children and to Jobs at the Twin Towers (NY TIMES, Sep. 24, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Rebuilding Downtown (NY TIMES, Sep. 24, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Finances of Terror (NY TIMES, Sep. 24, 2001)
* OP-ED ESSAY: The Ultimate Enemy (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Sep. 24, 2001)
* OP-ED: IN AMERICA: Leading America Beyond Fear (By BOB HERBERT, Sep. 24, 2001)
OP-ED: America's Sovereignty in a New World (By ROBERT WRIGHT, Sep. 24, 2001)
LETTERS: The Awakened Giant: How Will It Strike Back? (By PETER E. MURPHY et. al., Sep. 24, 2001)
* BUSINESS: Investors Try to Adjust to a New Set of Realities (By DAVID BARBOZA, Sep. 24, 2001)
* THE INVESTORS: No Big Rush to Buy or Sell by Wall Street Professionals (By RIVA D. ATLAS with JOSEPH B. TREASTER, Sep. 24, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: As the Economic Ground Zero Shudders, Ripples Spread (By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Sep. 24, 2001)
Terror Experts Use Lenses of Their Specialties (By FELICITY BARRINGER, Sep. 24, 2001)
THE COVERAGE: Networks Move to Revive Foreign News (By JIM RUTENBERG, Sep. 24, 2001)
* THE RUMOR: A False Challenge to News Photos Takes Root on the Web (By FELICITY BARRINGER, Sep. 24, 2001)
THE ENERGY MARKET: Military Plans Must Ensure Oil Flow (By NEELA BANERJEE, Sep. 24, 2001)
ADVERTISING: Cutbacks in Ad Spending Predicted (By STUART ELLIOTT, Sep. 24, 2001)
* NEW ECONOMY: Testing the Communications Network (By ELI M. NOAM, Sep. 24, 2001)
E-COMMERCE REPORT: Trouble at Online Travel Agencies (By BOB TEDESCHI, Sep. 24, 2001)
THE COMMENTATORS: An End, or an Extension, to Irony (By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Sep. 24, 2001)
SPORTS MEDIA AND BUSINESS: Long-Needed Perspective on the Air (By RICHARD SANDOMIR, Sep. 24, 2001)
ARTS: A Swift and United Response From Entertainers (By BERNARD WEINRAUB & NEIL STRAUSS, Sep. 24, 2001)
BOOKS: 'BORROWED FINERY': A World of Kindhearted Strangers and Negligent Parents (By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Sep. 24, 2001)
BOOKS: Stories of Trade Center, Now Suddenly Obituaries (By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, Sep. 24, 2001)
CULTURE: New Look for Entertainment in a Terror-Conscious World (By JOHN LELAND and PETER MARKS, Sep. 24, 2001)
MUSIC: NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC: Eeriness and Everyday Problems (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Sep. 24, 2001)
* MUSIC: Isaac Stern: Tough but Avid Teacher Is Recalled (By PETER MARKS, Sep. 24, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 24, 2001)
* TV: 'EVOLUTION': A Stark Explanation for Mankind From an Unlikely Rebel (By JULIE SALAMON, Sep. 24, 2001)
TV: A Disrupted Premiere Week Dawns With Comedy and Familiarity Favored (By BILL CARTER, Sep. 24, 2001)
* WRITERS ON WRITING: Seeing the Unimaginable Freezes the Imagination (By A. M. HOMES, Sep. 24, 2001)

Sunday, September 23, 2001:
On This Day: September 23 (Caesar Augustus 9/23/63 BC-8/19/14 AD, Helen Almira Shafer 9/23/1839-1/20/1894, Emmuska Orczy 9/23/1865-11/12/1947, Walter Lippmann 9/23/1889-12/14/1974, Tom C. Clark 9/23/1899-6/13/1977, John Coltrane 9/23/1926-7/17/1967, Mickey Rooney 1920, Julio Iglesias 1943, Mary Kay Place 1947, Bruce Spingsteen 1949)
Nixon Leaves Fate To G.O.P. Chiefs; Eisenhower Calls Him To A Talk (By Gladwin Hill, Sept. 23, 1952)
Victoria Martin, Suffragist, Dies: Nominated for U. S. President as Mrs. Woodhull in 1872
[9/23/1838-6/10/1927] (June 11, 1927)

* Violinist Isaac Stern Dies at 81; Led Efforts to Save Carnegie Hall (By ALLAN KOZINN, Sep. 23, 2001)
* Catherine G. Fabricant Dies at 81; Pushed Heart Illness Theory (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Sep. 23, 2001)
Dr. Theodore Silverstein, 96, Literature Scholar, Dies (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Sep. 23, 2001)
Solomon Sagall, Early Proponent of Pay-Per-View TV, Dies at 101 (By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Sep. 23, 2001)
George Bradley, Baseball Executive, Dies at 58 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 23, 2001)
John O'Neill Is Dead at 49; Trade Center Security Chief (By ROBIN POGREBIN, Sep. 23, 2001)
Walter Jinotti, Biomedical Engineer, Dies at 74 (By ERIC PACE, Sep. 23, 2001)
* THE PRESIDENT: Bush Tries to Steady Economy Jolted by Attack (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON & JOSEPH KAHN, Sep. 23, 2001)
THE OVERVIEW: More Reserves Called Up; Bush Consults With Putin (By JOHN H. CUSHMAN Jr., Sep. 23, 2001)
CONFLICTS: Once Appalled by Race Profiling, Many Find Themselves Doing It (By SAM HOWE VERHOVEK, Sep. 23, 2001)
* THE ADVISERS: From Many Voices, One Battle Strategy (By Jane Perlez, David E. Sanger & Thom Shanker, Sep. 23, 2001)
THE PLOT: Unpolished Secret Agents Were Able to Hide in Plain Sight
(By Tim Golden, Michael Moss & Jim Yardley, Sep. 23, 2001)
THE BIOLOGICAL THREAT: Defense May Be Inadequate for Germ or Toxic Attacks (By WILLIAM J. BROAD & MELODY PETERSEN, Sep. 23, 2001)
Terror Threat Strikes Fear in Sears Tower in Chicago (By JODI WILGOREN, Sep. 23, 2001)
THE REACTION: Far From Attacks, a City Finds Peace Shattered (By ROBIN TONER, Sep. 23, 2001)
TV Benefit Audience Surpasses Oscars (NY TIMES, Sep. 23, 2001)
PROUD SPIRITS: As Demand Soars, Flag Makers Help Bolster Nation's Morale (By JULIAN E. BARNES, Sep. 23, 2001)
* Suddenly, the Disney Magic Is in Short Supply (By GERALDINE FABRIKANT with SETH SCHIESEL, Sep. 23, 2001)
* Teenage Bulls See Profits in a Time of Anxiety (By MARY WILLIAMS WALSH, Sep. 23, 2001)
TERRORISTS: A Top Boss in Europe, an Unseen Cell in Gaza and Decoys Everywhere (By DOUGLAS FRANTZ with RAYMOND BONNER, Sep. 23, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Waging War in Afghanistan Could Rattle Region (By PATRICK E. TYLER, Sep. 23, 2001)
THE CHASE: The Hunt for bin Laden Gears Up on a Trail Gone Cold (By JOHN F. BURNS, Sep. 23, 2001)
The Pope, in Central Asia, Urges Peace (By MELINDA HENNEBERGER, Sep. 23, 2001)
ALLIANCES: United Arab Emirates Breaks With Taliban (By WARREN HOGE, Sep. 23, 2001)
THE POLICE: The Building of a Network That Is Global and Reliable (By TIM WEINER, Sep. 23, 2001)
REFUGEES: Aid Agencies Responding to the Afghanistan Exodus (By ELIZABETH OLSON, Sep. 23, 2001)
CANADA: Chrétien Under Pressure From Right and Left Over What to Give Washington (By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Sep. 23, 2001)
* THE CHILDREN: Anguish for Vast Toll of Children Left Behind (By AMY WALDMAN, Sep. 23, 2001)
From 5,000 Feet Up, Mapping Terrain for Ground Zero Workers (By KENNETH CHANG, Sep. 23, 2001)
CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK: The Trappings of Everyday Life Now Take on a Tragic Significance (By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Sep. 23, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Home Front: Security and Liberty (NY TIMES, Sep. 23, 2001)
EDITORIAL: A Disaster for the Working Poor (NY TIMES, Sep. 23, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Tom Ridge's Task (NY TIMES, Sep. 23, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: Autumn of Fears (By MAUREEN DOWD, Sep. 23, 2001)
* OP-ED: RECKONINGS: A Bad Week (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Sep. 23, 2001)
OP-ED: Faith and the Secular State (By LAMIN SANNEH, Sep. 23, 2001)
* LETTERS: Up From Ground Zero: Memory and Defiance (By MATTHEW BAIRD, Sep. 23, 2001)
LETTERS: A Time to Thank Heroes and Bind Wounds (By, Sep. 23, 2001)
BUSINESS: Dazed Companies Sit on Their Wallets (By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Sep. 23, 2001)
* THE MARKETS: Investors Seek a Refuge, and Experts Do, Too (By DANNY HAKIM, Sep. 23, 2001)
* MARKET WATCH: Grim Realities, Here to Stay (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Sep. 23, 2001)
Suddenly, the Disney Magic Is in Short Supply (By GERALDINE FABRIKANT with SETH SCHIESEL, Sep. 23, 2001)
ECONOMIC VIEW: Priorities in the Wake of a Shattered Taboo (By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Sep. 23, 2001)
A Landlord at Disaster's Margin (By BERNARD SIMON, Sep. 23, 2001)
New Offices, Mixed Emotions at Fund Companies (By REED ABELSON & ELIZABETH HARRIS, Sep. 23, 2001)
When Grief Meets the Reality of Financial Planning (By JAN M. ROSEN, Sep. 23, 2001)
Corporate Planes: Perks or Necessities? (By MICHELINE MAYNARD, Sep. 23, 2001)
* BOOK VALUE | "JACK: STRAIGHT FROM THE GUT": Some Straight Talk, Without a Step Back [John F. Welch]
(By WILLIAM J. HOLSTEIN, Sep. 23, 2001)
Trying to Reweave Threads of Tattered Offices (By CONSTANCE L. HAYS, Sep. 23, 2001)
Defiantly, The Street Retakes The Street (By JONATHAN D. GLATER, Sep. 23, 2001)
Teenage Bulls See Profits in a Time of Anxiety (By MARY WILLIAMS WALSH, Sep. 23, 2001)
PORTFOLIOS: A Forecaster's Art Takes a Sharp Turn (By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Sep. 23, 2001)
MARKET INSIGHT: Insurers Could Falter Under Huge Payouts (By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Sep. 23, 2001)
MIDSTREAM: Time for the Boomers to Dig in (By JAMES SCHEMBARI, Sep. 23, 2001)
A Revised Set of Rules for the Road (By JANE L. LEVERE, Sep. 23, 2001)
Focused on Basics, Dollar Stores May Show Strength (By ELIZABETH KELLEHER, Sep. 23, 2001)
PRIVATE SECTOR: The Ties That Bind in Telecommunications (Compiled by RICK GLADSTONE, Sep. 23, 2001)
INVESTING DIARY: Left Holding the Bag on US Airways Stock (By Laurence Zuckerman, Sep. 23, 2001)
PERSONAL BUSINESS DIARY: Turning to the Internet to Give to Charities (Compiled by Vivian Marino, Sep. 23, 2001)
* ARTS: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 23, 2001)
* ART: Hieronymous Bosch: A Mystery Man Who Created Monsters (By ALAN RIDING, Sep. 23, 2001)
* ART: Peering Into the Abyss of the Future (By JOHN ROCKWELL, Sep. 23, 2001)
DANCE: The Spirit of the Dance Is Classical, but the Style Is Harlem (By JENNIFER DUNNING, Sep. 23, 2001)
FILM: A Film, Like a Face, Is Part of a Body (By DAVID THOMSON, Sep. 23, 2001)
MUSIC: Coltrane at 75: the Man and the Myths (By FRANCIS DAVIS, Sep. 23, 2001)
THEATER: For One Night, the Dreams Are Back (By PETER MARKS, Sep. 23, 2001)
THEATER: Action Speaks Louder (By CAROL MARTIN, Sep. 23, 2001)
TV: Late-Night Time Is Still the Right Time (By STEPHEN BATTAGLIO, Sep. 23, 2001)
TV: Lessons in Being Human (By JOYCE MILLMAN, Sep. 23, 2001)
STYLE: After a Calamity, the Past Calls (By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Sep. 23, 2001)
* At a Loss and Craving Order (By GUY TREBAY, Sep. 23, 2001)
Gossip Holds Its Tongue (By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Sep. 23, 2001)
High Society Goes Low Key: A Hard Time for Galas (By RUTH LA FERLA, Sep. 23, 2001)
ON THE STREET: Remembrance [Slide Show] (Photographs by BILL CUNNINGHAM, Sep. 23, 2001)
VOWS: Anne Dewey and Carleton Goodnow (By KATHRYN SHATTUCK, Sep. 23, 2001)
* WEEK IN REVIEW: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 23, 2001)
* INVADERS: Who Hates the U.S.? Who Loves It? (By ELAINE SCIOLINO, Sep. 23, 2001)
* MELTING POT: Identify Yourself: Who's American? (By GREGORY RODRIGUEZ, Sep. 23, 2001)
The Prospect of a War Without a Wartime Boom (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Sep. 23, 2001)
Forget the Past: It's A War Unlike Any Other (By JOHN KIFNER, Sep. 23, 2001)
It's Not a Time for Party, but for How Long? (By RICHARD L. BERKE, Sep. 23, 2001)
NY TIMES MAGAZINE: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 23, 2001)
* ON LANGUAGE: Words of the War on Terror (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Sep. 23, 2001)
THE ETHICIST: Blood Ties (By RANDY COHEN, Sep. 23, 2001)
This Is What a Day Means (By ANDREW SULLIVAN, Sep. 23, 2001)
9 Failures of the Imagination (By JONATHAN LETHEM, Sep. 23, 2001)
Windows on the World [Slide Show] (Photographs by JEFF MERMELSTEIN, Sep. 23, 2001)
Why You? (By MICHAEL LEWIS, Sep. 23, 2001)
Voices from a Brooklyn Mosque (Photographs by ANDRES SERRANO, Sep. 23, 2001)
Fallout (By KURT ANDERSEN, Sep. 23, 2001)
The Movie I Didn't Know How to Write (By MICHAEL TOLKIN, Sep. 23, 2001)
Billy Collins, 'Sailing Alone Around the Room': Stand-Up Poet (By DWIGHT GARNER, Sep. 23, 2001)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 23, 2001)
'Marie Antoinette': It's Not So Good to Be the Queen (By FRANCINE DU PLESSIX GRAY, Sep. 23, 2001)

Saturday, September 22, 2001:
On This Day: September 22 (Michael Faraday 9/22/1791-8/25/1867, Erich von Stroheim 9/22/1885-5/12/1957, Babette Deutsch 9/22/1895-11/13/1982, Paul Muni 9/22/1895-8/25/1967, Charles Huggins 9/22/1901-1/12/1997, Martha Scott 1914, Tommy Lasorda 1927, Shari Belafonte 1954, Debby Boone 1956, Catherine Oxenberg 1961)
Highly Important: A Proclamation by the President of the United States (NY Times, Sept. 22, 1862)
John Houseman, Actor and Producer, 86, Dies [9/22/1902-10/31/1988] (By MARILYN BERGER, November 1, 1988)
Sandy Saddler, Boxing Champion, Dies at 75 (By GERALD ESKENAZI, Sep. 22, 2001)
Douglas Newton, Curator Emeritus at the Metropolitan, Dead at 80 (By HOLLAND COTTER, Sep. 22, 2001)
Lieut. Gen. Timothy L. Maude, 53, an Army Deputy Chief of Staff (NY TIMES, Sep. 22, 2001)
Neil Levin, Executive Director of Bistate Port Authority, Dies at 46 (By EDWARD WYATT, Sep. 22, 2001)
* Jane Dudley, Modern Dancer and Teacher, Is Dead at 89 (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Sep. 22, 2001)
Marcos Pérez Jiménez, Venezuela Ruler Is Dead at 87 (By LARRY ROHTER, Sep. 22, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Calibrating the Use of Force (NY TIMES, Sep. 22, 2001)
EDITORIAL OBSERVER: The Quiet Consolation of the Material World (By VERLYN KLINKENBORG, Sep. 22, 2001)
OP-ED: ABROAD AT HOME: 'To Thine Own Self Be True' (By ANTHONY LEWIS, Sep. 22, 2001)
OP-ED: CORRESPONDENT: Remembering and Forgetting (By BILL KELLER, Sep. 22, 2001)
OP-ED: Afghans Can Be Our Allies (By BARNETT R. RUBIN, Sep. 22, 2001)
OP-ED: Innocence Toppled and Lost (By DANIEL BORN, Sep. 22, 2001)
LETTERS: Bush Rallies America: Ovations and Doubts (By JEFFREY A. KRAMES, Sep. 22, 2001)
* BUSINESS: Share Prices Plunge 14% for the Week, Second Worst Ever
[Dow -140, Nasdaq -48] (By ALEX BERENSON, Sep. 22, 2001)
* MARKET PLACE: Confidence, in the Economy and the U.S., Is the Long-Term Issue (By FLOYD NORRIS, Sep. 22, 2001)
THE BAILOUT: Congress Allocates $15 Billion to Help the Airline Industry (By LIZETTE ALVAREZ, Sep. 22, 2001)
THE INSURERS: Congress Acts to Provide Coverage to Airlines (By JOSEPH B. TREASTER with ALAN COWELL, Sep. 22, 2001)
THE AIRLINES: Toll Mounts as Northwest Plans to Cut 10,000 Jobs (By STEVEN GREENHOUSE, Sep. 22, 2001)
THE MILITARY CONTRACTORS: Beneficiaries of the Military Buildup Await Their Orders (By JAMES DAO, Sep. 22, 2001)
THE ECONOMY: Corporations Ask Bush to Move Fast on Offering Stimulus Package (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Sep. 22, 2001)
FLIGHT SCHOOLS: Government Lifts Its Ban on Some Flight Training (By DAVID BARBOZA, Sep. 22, 2001)
ARTS: THE BENEFIT: Stars Gather on TV to Raise Money and Pay Tribute (By CARYN JAMES, Sep. 22, 2001)
ARTS: Thinkers Face the Limits of a Just War (By CELESTINE BOHLEN, Sep. 22, 2001)
MUSIC: Brahms, Masur and Philharmonic Touch the Heart of the Matter (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Sep. 22, 2001)
THEATER: Theater Photo Archive Lost Amid the Rubble (By RALPH BLUMENTHAL, Sep. 22, 2001)
TV: 'West Wing' Rushes Script Keyed to Attack (By BILL CARTER, Sep. 22, 2001)
* Tradition Is Upheld: The New Miss America Will Be Chosen Tonight (By IVER PETERSON, Sep. 22, 2001)

Friday, September 21, 2001:
On This Day: September 21 (Charles Nicoole 9/21/1866-2/28/1936, H. G. Wells 9/21/1866-8/13/1946, Gustav Holst 9/21/1874-5/25/1934, Hans Hartung 9/21/1904-12/7/1989, Larry Hagman 1931, Stephen King 9/21/1947, Bill Murray 1950, Nancy Travis 1961, Rob Morrow 1962, Faith Hill 1967, Ricki Lake 1968)
Hurricane Sweeps Coast; 11 Dead, 71 Missing, L.I. Toll; 80 Die In New England Flood (NY Times, Sept. 21, 1938)
Henry L. Stimson Dies at 83 In His Home on Long Island [9/21/1867-10/20/1950] (NY Times, October 21, 1950)
Lewis Rudin, Head of Real Estate Family, Dies at 74 (By CHARLES V. BAGLI, Sep. 21, 2001)
Archibald Murray, 68; Led Bar Association, Dies (By PAUL LEWIS, Sep. 21, 2001)
David S. Berry, Popular Financial Analyst, Is Dead at 43 (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Sep. 21, 2001)
David Yunich, Ex-Chairman of the M.T.A., Is Dead at 84 (By RANDY KENNEDY, Sep. 21, 2001)
* NEWS ANALYSIS: A Clear Message: 'I Will Not Relent' (By R. W. APPLE Jr., Sep. 21, 2001)
* THE OVERVIEW: Prepare for Casualties, Bush Says, While Asking Support of Nation (By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Sep. 21, 2001)
* THE SCENE: Joint Congress Transformed Into a United Showcase of Courage and Resolve (By ALISON MITCHELL, Sep. 21, 2001)
* President Bush's Address on Terrorism Before a Joint Meeting of Congress (NY TIMES, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE REACTION: Many Listeners Are Reassured by Tough Talk (By ROBERT D. McFADDEN, Sep. 22, 2001)
HOMELAND SECURITY: Bush Chooses Old Ally For Cabinet-Level Post (By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS, Sep. 21, 2001)
WASHINGTON'S RESPONSE: Congress Joins in Support of President (By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM, Sep. 21, 2001)
F.B.I. WARNING: Movie Studios Possible Target of Terrorists (By SETH SCHIESEL, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE HUNT: Trail of Man Sought in 2 Plots Leads to Chicago and Arrest (By JUDITH MILLER & JODI WILGOREN, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: Man Sought as Possible Organizer of Attacks (By JAMES RISEN & DAVID JOHNSTON, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE TRACKS: Car Rentals Link Suspects To New Jersey (By LAURA MANSNERUS, Sep. 21, 2001)
AVIATION: U.S. Identified Some Elements of Hijack Plot in Advance (By MATTHEW L. WALD, Sep. 21, 2001)
AIRPORT SECURITY: Many Travelers on Airlines Appeal for Tighter Security (By MICHAEL JANOFSKY, Sep. 21, 2001)
HONORING THE DEAD: Requests to Bury Civilians at Arlington Spark Debate (By RAYMOND HERNANDEZ, Sep. 21, 2001)
POLITICAL FALLOUT: Change Ahead for Troubled Boston Airport Agency (By KATE ZERNIKE, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE LAW: Racial Profiling May Get Wider Approval by Courts (By WILLIAM GLABERSON, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE TALIBAN: Afghan Mullahs Suggest bin Laden Leave Country (By JOHN F. BURNS, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE COMMANDER: Leadership That Blends Assortment of Skills (By TODD S. PURDUM, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE MILITARY: U.S. Dispatches Ground Troops and Top Officer (By ERIC SCHMITT and MICHAEL R. GORDON, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE SUSPECTS: The Mysterious Life of a Man From France (By SUZANNE DALEY, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE HIJACKERS: Confusion Over Names Clouds Identities of Attackers on Jets (By NEIL MacFARQUHAR, Sep. 21, 2001)
NY REGION: UNDERGROUND: Looting Is Reported in Center's Tomblike Mall (By C. J. CHIVERS, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE TRADE CENTER: The Evacuation That Kept a Horrible Toll From Climbing Higher (By DEAN E. MURPHY & CLIFFORD J. LEVY, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE TALLY: Giuliani Reports Sharp Increase in the Number of Those Listed as Missing (By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Sep. 21, 2001)
TURF BATTLES: Conflicting Visions of How to Rebuild Lower Manhattan (By ERIC LIPTON & CHARLES V. BAGLI, Sep. 21, 2001)
WINDOWS ON THE WORLD: A Showpiece's Survivors Wonder What to Do Now (By STEVEN GREENHOUSE, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE PORT AUTHORITY: $2.4 Billion in Losses Are Detailed in Report (By RONALD SMOTHERS, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE MISSING: Musical Tribute and Memories Serve as Balm for Families and Friends (NY TIMES, Sep. 22, 2001)
* EDITORIAL: Mr. Bush's Most Important Speech (NY TIMES, Sep. 21, 2001)
EDITORIAL: New York Loves America (NY TIMES, Sep. 21, 2001)
EDITORIAL: On the Front Lines in the Global War Against Terrorism (By STEVEN R. WEISMAN, Sep. 21, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Hama Rules (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Sep. 21, 2001)
OP-ED: Fighting Terrorism on a Global Front (By KOFI A. ANNAN, Sep. 21, 2001)
OP-ED: First, Define the Battlefield (By MICHAEL WALZER, Sep. 21, 2001)
OP-ED: The Neighborhood We Built (By UDAYAN GUPTA, Sep. 21, 2001)
LETTERS: The Case for War, and the Case for Restraint (By JOHN PAINTER et. al., Sep. 21, 2001)
* THE MARKETS: Deepening Gloom Pushes S.&P. Index Below 1,000 Mark
[Dow -383, Nasdaq -57] (By ALEX BERENSON, Sep. 21, 2001)
FLOYD NORRIS: Risky Deals and Insider Sales Precede Crisis (By FLOYD NORRIS, Sep. 21, 2001)
EUROPE: Turmoil Is Hitting Large Players (By ALAN COWELL, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE AIRLINES: Congress to Proceed With Rescue Plan (By LIZETTE ALVAREZ, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE BAILOUT: Critics Raise Concerns on Funds Proposed for Troubled Airlines (By LAURENCE ZUCKERMAN, Sep. 21, 2001)
Bass Family, in Need of Money, Forced to Sell 6.4% of Disney (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON & RIVA D. ATLAS, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE ECONOMY: Greenspan Hits Cautious Note on Relief Steps (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Sep. 21, 2001)
Wireless Companies May Be Near Deal for New Licenses (By STEPHEN LABATON with ANDREW ROSS SORKIN, Sep. 21, 2001)
WALL STREET: Financial Firms Are Scattering Operations (By PATRICK McGEEHAN, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE CLAIMS: Some Insurers Help but Some Are Found Lacking (By JOSEPH B. TREASTER and GREG WINTER, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE INSURERS: New Forecasts of Total Losses Rise Steeply (By ALAN COWELL with JOSEPH B. TREASTER, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE TROUBLE-SHOOTER: Bush's Man on Wall St. Pushed for Reopening (By JOSEPH KAHN, Sep. 21, 2001)
ADVERTISING: Rapid Developments in Terror Case Complicate Adjustments of Ads (By STUART ELLIOTT, Sep. 21, 2001)
ART: 'AMERICAN IDENTITIES: A NEW LOOK': In History's Comforting Sweep (By ROBERTA SMITH, Sep. 21, 2001)
ART: 'BAMANA': Kicking Up a Storm to Keep Chaos and Evil at Bay (By HOLLAND COTTER, Sep. 21, 2001)
ART: WILLIAM HENRY JACKSON: Images That Established the Value of Yellowstone (By GRACE GLUECK, Sep. 21, 2001)
ANTIQUES: A Chinese Pavilion Fit for a Queen (By WENDY MOONAN, Sep. 21, 2001)
BOOKS: 'THE ASH GARDEN': Disparate Lives, Connected by One Bomb (By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Sep. 21, 2001)
FILM: 'GLITTER': Dreaming a Dream and Paying the Price for It (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Sep. 21, 2001)
FILM: 'GOD, SEX & APPLE PIE': Five Guys in a Cabin With a Bag Full of Problems (BY DAVE KEHR, Sep. 21, 2001)
FILM: 'GO TIGERS!': Carrying the Ball for a Favorable Vote (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Sep. 21, 2001)
FILM: 'IN SEARCH OF PEACE, PART 1': Recalling Israel's History (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Sep. 21, 2001)
MUSIC: BETTY BUCKLEY: Songs With a Message of Resilience (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Sep. 21, 2001)
MUSIC REVIEW: Ominous Strains of Bach, in Tune With the Times (By ANNE MIDGETTE, Sep. 21, 2001)
THEATER: Broadway Is in the War All the Way (By JESSE McKINLEY, Sep. 21, 2001)
TV: 'THE EDUCATION OF MAX BIXFORD': Professor Grumpy in a Women's College (By JULIE SALAMON, Sep. 21, 2001)
THE OUTSIDER: Camping and Fishing on the Beach in Montauk (By JAMES GORMAN, Sep. 21, 2001)

Thursday, September 20, 2001:
On This Day: September 20 (Sir James Dewar 9/20/1842-3/27/1923, Herbert Putnam 9/20/1861-8/14/1955, Maxwell Perkins 9/20/1884-6/17/1947, Leo Strauss 9/20/1899-10/18/1973, Stevie Smith 9/20/1902-3/7/1971, Sid Chaplin 9/20/1916-1/11/1986, Red Auerbach 1916, Joyce Brothers 9/20/1928, Sophia Loren 9/20/1934, Guy LaFleur 1951)
Mrs. King Defeats Riggs, 6-4, 6-3, 6-3, Amid a Circus Atmosphere (By NEIL AMDUR, Sept. 20, 1973)
* Upton Sinclair, Author, Dead; Crusader for Social Justice, 90' [9/20/1878-11/25/1968] (NY TIMES, November 26, 1968)
George Ireland, Title-Winning Coach at Loyola, Dies at 88 (By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Sep. 20, 2001)
Gunnar Dybwad, 92, Dies; Early Advocate for the Disabled (By ERIC PACE, Sep. 20, 2001)
Stuart Sherman, Performance Artist and Playwright, Dies at 55 (By MEL GUSSOW, Sep. 20, 2001)
Edward A. O'Neal, 57, Chief of Australian Bank, Is Dead (By BECKY GAYLORD, Sep. 20, 2001)
Don Hume, Rower, Dies at 86 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 20, 2001)
* W. Ralph Gamber, Entrepreneur, Dies at 89 [honey in bear-shaped bottle] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE BALANCING ACT: Bush and Leaders Confer on Way to Bolster Weakened Economy (By ALISON MITCHELL & RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: Three Are Held in Detroit After Airport Diagram Is Found (By DAVID JOHNSTON with PAUL ZIELBAUER, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE POLITICAL PARTIES: Disaster Forges a Spirit of Cooperation in a Usually Contentious Congress
(By ADAM CLYMER, Sep. 20, 2001)
AVIATION: Safety Concerns Turn to Closing Gaping Holes in Security of Non-Commercial Aircraft
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE MISSING: For Those Awaiting Verification of a Loved One's Fate, a Special Kind of Grief
(By JANE E. BRODY, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE AIRLINES: White House to Seek $5 Billion as Part of Airline Rescue Plan (By LIZETTE ALVAREZ with LAURA M. HOLSON, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE AUTOMAKERS: Detroit, With Its Sales Falling, Is Urged to Help Spur Economy (By DANNY HAKIM, Sep. 20, 2001)
Judges Ease Surveillance of Web Use (By REUTERS, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE ESPIONAGE BUSINESS: Surge of New Technologies Erodes U.S. Edge in Spying (By WILLIAM J. BROAD, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE OVERVIEW: Bush Orders Heavy Bombers Near Afghans (By DAVID E. SANGER, Sep. 20, 2001)
WASHINGTON: Bush Advisers Split on Scope of Retaliation (By PATRICK E. TYLER and ELAINE SCIOLINO, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE NEIGHBOR: Pakistan Leader Defends Joining U.S. in Hunt for bin Laden (By JOHN F. BURNS, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE PAPER TRAIL: Roadblocks Cited in Efforts to Trace bin Laden's Money (By TIM WEINER & DAVID CAY JOHNSTON, Sep. 20, 2001)
In the Gaza Strip, Anger at the U.S. Still Smolders (By IAN FISHER, Sep. 20, 2001)
LESSONS FROM LOCKERBIE: Terror Up Close Gave Air Safety a Lift in Britain (By SARAH LYALL, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE ALLIES: Though Supportive, Has Little to Offer Militarily (By SUZANNE DALEY, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE BORDERS: New Security Clogs U.S. Borders (By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr. with BERNARD SIMON, Sep. 20, 2001)
Blair as Statesman Outshines Politician (By WARREN HOGE, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE MAYOR: In Crisis, Giuliani's Popularity Overflows City (By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Sep. 20, 2001)
DEATH BENEFITS: Money for Families of Attack Victims Could Vary Widely (By JIM DWYER & DIANA B. HENRIQUES, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE SCENE: For a City Still in Shock, Picking Up Life's Routine (By KIRK JOHNSON, Sep. 20, 2001)
* THE SKYSCRAPERS: Engineers Say Buildings Near Trade Center Held Up Well (By ERIC LIPTON & JAMES GLANZ, Sep. 20, 2001)
GROUND ZERO: Unwilling to Give Up Yet, Searchers Find Crevices and Caverns, but No Survivors
(By KEVIN FLYNN, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE FUNERALS: Two Masses, the First of Many, for Fallen Police Officers (By MICHAEL COOPER, Sep. 20, 2001)
* THE COMPUTERS: Billions Will Be Spent on Replacing Technology (By JAYSON BLAIR, Sep. 20, 2001)
REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK: For a Village of Two-Story Buildings, the Skyscraper Attack Reverberates
(By, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE SUBWAYS: Damage on Lines Near Towers Is Less Than Officials Feared (By RANDY KENNEDY, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE HOT ZONE: Battery Park Set to Reopen to Residents of North End (By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD, Sep. 20, 2001)
SOCIETY: To Party or Not to Party, When the Gala Is for Children (By CATHY HORYN, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE HARBOR: Beyond Water's Edge, Coast Guard's Armed Patrols Assume Vital Importance (By JOHN KIFNER, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE VICTIMS: From Those Left Behind, Remembrances of Love, Hopes and Caring (NY TIMES, Sep. 20, 2001)
An Unimaginable Emergency Put Communications to the Test (By LISA GUERNSEY, Sep. 20, 2001)
CHANGED LIVES: Religious Leader Takes His Calling to Ground Zero (By AMY WALDMAN, Sep. 20, 2001)
Peace Signs Amid Calls for War (By ANDREW JACOBS, Sep. 20, 2001)
METRO MATTERS: Our Daily Tribute to Differences Provokes Dislike Among Many (By JOYCE PURNICK, Sep. 20, 2001)
For Evacuees, New Homes and Help (By JOHN LELAND, Sep. 20, 2001)
Neighbors, Shining Through: When the Nest Resists the Storm (By WILLIAM L. HAMILTON, Sep. 20, 2001)
It's Going to Take More Than Elbow Grease (By DEBORAH BALDWIN, Sep. 20, 2001)
* EDITORIAL: The View From Wall Street (NY TIMES, Sep. 20, 2001)
* EDITORIAL OBSERVER: An Imbalance of Power: Afghanistan's Deceptive Strengths (By PHILIP TAUBMAN, Sep. 20, 2001)
* OP-ED: ESSAY: Equal Time for Hitler? (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Sep. 20, 2001)
* OP-ED: IN AMERICA: The Right Answer [Rudolph Giuliani] (By BOB HERBERT, Sep. 20, 2001)
* OP-ED: The War on Terror Is Not New (By NIALL FERGUSON, Sep. 20, 2001)
LETTERS: In a Wounded Land, the Drums of September
(By M. KATHERINE SHEAR, M.D.& CHARLES F. REYNOLDS III, M.D. et. al., Sep. 20, 2001)
BUSINESS: Rally in Late Afternoon Stems Steep Losses for Shares
[Dow -144, Nasdaq -27] (By ALEX BERENSON, Sep. 20, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: Bond Investors Show Signs of Optimism (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE TRADING FIRM: A Commodities Dealer Struggles to Carry On (By LESLIE WAYNE, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE INSURANCE: Death Benefits Will Be Paid Quickly, Companies Say (By JOSEPH B. TREASTER with MILT FREUDENHEIM, Sep. 20, 2001)
ECONOMIC SCENE: Gross Domestic Product Vs. Gross Domestic Well-Being (By ALAN B. KRUEGER, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE TRAVEL INDUSTRY: America's Fear of Flying Has Devastating Effect on Tourism
(By SAM HOWE VERHOVEK with LESLIE KAUFMAN, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE CUTBACKS: Airways' Dim Outlook Deteriorates (By LAURENCE ZUCKERMAN, Sep. 20, 2001)
THE MEDIA: Draping Newscasts With the Flag (By JIM RUTENBERG & BILL CARTER, Sep. 20, 2001)
Microsoft's Passport Sign-On System Will Work on Rival Sites (By STEVE LOHR, Sep. 20, 2001)
Typhoon Deals New Blow to Taiwan Manufacturers (By MARK LANDLER with WAYNE ARNOLD, Sep. 20, 2001)
ARTS: Artists Talk About Performing in a Time of Tragedy (By PETER MARKS, Sep. 20, 2001)
ARTS ABROAD: Sad Fairy Tale With an Extremist's Letter (By ALAN RIDING, Sep. 20, 2001)
BOOKS: 'THE SAVAGE GIRL': A City's Pledge of Allegiance Is Shop Till You Drop (By JANET MASLIN, Sep. 20, 2001)
MAKING BOOKS: An Odd Business Felt Even Odder (By MARTIN ARNOLD, Sep. 20, 2001)
FILM CRITIC: At Toronto Festival, Unease on the Screens and the Streets (By ELVIS MITCHELL, Sep. 20, 2001)
POP: MELISSA FERRICK: Playing an Acoustic Guitar as if It Were a Full Band (By ANN POWERS, Sep. 20, 2001)
THEATER: At 'Phantom,' Empty Seats and Defiance (By ROBIN POGREBIN, Sep. 20, 2001)
TV: 'ART:21': First-Person Reports From Art's Cutting Edge (By NEIL GENZLINGER, Sep. 20, 2001)
* WRITING: Novelists Reassess Their Subject Matter (By DINITIA SMITH, Sep. 20, 2001)
* CIRCUITS: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 20, 2001)
An Unimaginable Emergency Put Communications to the Test (By LISA GUERNSEY, Sep. 20, 2001)
The Simple BlackBerry Allowed Contact When Phones Failed [Pager] (By SIMON ROMERO, Sep. 20, 2001)
Using a Cellphone Signal to Hunt for a Victim in Desperate Need (By SIMON ROMERO, Sep. 20, 2001)
STATE OF THE ART: Gadgets for a More Sober World (By DAVID POGUE, Sep. 20, 2001)
ONLINE SHOPPER: Looking for a Flag on the Web (By MICHELLE SLATALLA, Sep. 20, 2001)
ONLINE DIARY: Taking Refuge on the Internet, a Quilt of Tales and Solace (By PAMELA LiCALZI O'CONNELL, Sep. 20, 2001)
* WHAT'S NEXT : Quantum Theory Could Expand the Limits of Computer Chips (By ANNE EISENBERG, Sep. 20, 2001)
* Fact-Driven? Collegial? This Site Wants You [www.wikipedia.com] (By PETER MEYERS, Sep. 20, 2001)
Pilotless Copter Takes a Whirl as an Investigation Tool (By JEFFREY SELINGO, Sep. 20, 2001)
BASICS: Tracking Your Fitness, Every Step of the Way (By IAN AUSTEN, Sep. 20, 2001)
Q & A: A New Generation of Wireless, Built for Speed (By J.D. BIERSDORFER, Sep. 20, 2001)
HEALTH: 3 Studies Show Drug Can Slow Kidney Disease (By PHILIP J. HILTS, Sep. 20, 2001)

Wednesday, September 19, 2001:
On This Day: September 19 (George Cadbury 9/19/1839-10/24/1922, William H. Lever 9/19/1851-5/7/1925, Bergen Evans 9/19/1904-2/4/1978)
The President Dead; Gen. Arthur Takes the Oath As President (NY Times, September 19, 1881)
* William Golding Is Dead at 81; The Author of 'Lord of the Flies' [born 9/19/1911] (By BRUCE LAMBERT, June 19, 1993)
Samuel Z. Arkoff, Maker of Drive-In Thrillers, Dies at 83 (By ALJEAN HARMETZ, Sep. 19, 2001)
Tank Younger, First Star From Black College to Play in N.F.L., Dies at 73 (By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE OVERVIEW: U.S. Orders Combat Planes Sent to Persian Gulf Region (By DAVID STOUT, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE PRESIDENT: In This Crisis, Bush Is Writing His Own Script (By ELISABETH BUMILLER & FRANK BRUNI, Sep. 19, 2001)
POLICY & LEGISLATION: U.S. Widens Policy on Detaining Suspects (By PHILIP SHENON & ROBIN TONER, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: Officials Say 2 More Jets May Have Been in the Plot (By DAVID JOHNSTON & JAMES RISEN, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE ANGER: Victims of Mistaken Identity, Sikhs Pay a Price for Turbans (By LAURIE GOODSTEIN & TAMAR LEWIN, Sep. 19, 2001)
Billions Promised by U.S. as Carriers' Layoffs Mount (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON & ALISON MITCHELL, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE ECONOMY: Attacks Strike Hard at States' Economies (By PAM BELLUCK, Sep. 19, 2001)
FOREIGN STUDENTS: New Scrutiny of Access to U.S. Courses (By DIANA JEAN SCHEMO, Sep. 19, 2001)
* CHRONOLOGY: Orders, at the Time of Impact (By JOHN H. CUSHMAN Jr., Sep. 19, 2001)
THE SAUDIS: Washington Concerned by Moves of Saudis (By CHRISTOPHER DREW with JUDITH MILLER, Sep. 19, 2001)
TELEVISION: Far Conflict Challenges Slimmed-Down Networks (By FELICITY BARRINGER, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE MILITARY: Scarcity of Afghan Targets Leads U.S. to Revise Strategy
(By Michael R. Gordon, Eric Schmitt & Thom Shanker, Sep. 19, 2001)
DIPLOMACY: World Leaders List Conditions on Cooperation (By PATRICK E. TYLER & JANE PERLEZ, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE MULLAHS: Afghans Stall but Show Little Willingness to Give Up bin Laden (By JOHN F. BURNS, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE PURISTS: Taliban: From Vigilantes to Strict Rulers (By BARRY BEARAK, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE PANIC: Afghans Rush to Flee, but Pakistan Shuts the Door (NY TIMES, Sep. 19, 2001)
* DISAVOWAL: Father Denies 'Gentle Son' Could Hijack Any Jetliner (By NEIL MacFARQUHAR, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE ALLIANCE: NATO Nations Vow to Support U.S., but Few Have Much to Offer Militarily (By SUZANNE DALEY, Sep. 19, 2001)
Bush Meeting With Indonesian to Focus on Islamic Militancy (By SETH MYDANS, Sep. 19, 2001)
* SHIRVAN STEPPE JOURNAL: Pipeline to the Past Is a Gift From Oil to Archaeology (By DOUGLAS FRANTZ, Sep. 19, 2001)
* Buddhism Takes Root in Bleakness of Canada (By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Sep. 19, 2001)
Taiwan Is Cleared for Membership in W.T.O. (By ELIZABETH OLSON, Sep. 19, 2001)
NY REGION: TOURISM: Vacant Rooms, Empty Tables and Scared Tourists (By CHARLES V. BAGLI, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE SITE: At the Site, Little Hope of Uncovering Survivors (By SUSAN SACHS, Sep. 19, 2001)
BIOMETRICS: Exploring Technology to Protect Passengers With Fingerprint or Retina Scans (By BARNABY J. FEDER, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE PLANES: Design Goal: Keeping Jets From Misuse as Missiles (By KENNETH CHANG, Sep. 19, 2001)
A NEW YORK MOSQUE: Afghans at Queens Mosque Are Divided Over bin Laden (By DEXTER FILKINS, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE AIRPORTS: Rethinking the Security at Airports (By DEAN E. MURPHY and JOEL BRINKLEY, Sep. 19, 2001)
* Reaching the Sky, and Finding a Limit (By DAVID W. DUNLAP & JULIE V. IOVINE, Sep. 19, 2001)
New York's Jews Seek Sense and Promise in a New Year (NY TIMES, Sep. 19, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Wartime Rhetoric (NY TIMES, Sep. 19, 2001)
* OP-ED: LIBERTIES: Old Ruses, New Barbarians (By MAUREEN DOWD, Sep. 19, 2001)
* OP-ED: RECKONINGS: What to Do (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Sep. 19, 2001)
OP-ED: The Mideast Is Also Changed (By SHIBLEY TELHAMI, Sep. 19, 2001)
* OP-ED: Fear in the Open City (By ANIKA RAHMAN, Sep. 19, 2001)
LETTERS: Fighting Back, While Preserving Our Values (By PAMELA STANLEY et. al., Sep. 19, 2001)
* THE MARKETS: Stock Markets Hold Steady a Day After Big Sell-Off
[Dow -17, Nasdaq -24] (By FLOYD NORRIS with JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Sep. 19, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: Gold Funds Turning a Profit for Investors (By DANNY HAKIM, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE INVESTMENT BANKERS: Business Suite Is Taking On New Meaning (By PATRICK McGEEHAN, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE LAYOFFS: Boeing and United Plan to Lay Off Thousands (By LAURA M. HOLSON & LAURENCE ZUCKERMAN, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE INSURERS: New Sense of Anxiety Lifts Insurance Sales (By JOSEPH B. TREASTER & GREG WINTER, Sep. 19, 2001)
BUSINESS TRAVEL: Airport Security Becomes More Intrusive and Intensive (By JOE SHARKEY, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE ECONOMY: Consumer Spending Returning to Normal (By LESLIE KAUFMAN with JULIAN E. BARNES, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE SUPERVISORS: Finding Ways to Reassure Employees (By EVE TAHMINCIOGLU and ANDREA GABOR, Sep. 19, 2001)
FLIGHT ATTENDANTS: Fear of Flying and Layoffs as Air Crews Try to Cope (By JOHN W. FOUNTAIN with SUSAN SAULNY, Sep. 19, 2001)
* LIFE'S WORK: A List and a Photo to Never Forget (By LISA BELKIN, Sep. 19, 2001)
MY JOB: Americans Coping in the Aftermath (NY TIMES, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE BOSS: A Hole Full of Promise and Now Pain (By ALEXANDRA LEBENTHAL, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE ADVERTISING: Insurers Hope to Alter Their Image (By MILT FREUDENHEIM, Sep. 19, 2001)
THE COVERAGE: CNN Returns to Its Element but Faces High Expectations (By BILL CARTER, Sep. 19, 2001)
* ARTS: THE VICTIMS: A Homegrown Memorial Brings Strangers Together (By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Sep. 19, 2001)
* ARTS: No. 1 Anthem: 'God Bless America' (By CELESTINE BOHLEN, Sep. 19, 2001)
ART: In New York's Galleries, a New Context Seems to Remake the Art (By ROBERTA SMITH, Sep. 19, 2001)
ARTS ABROAD: Celebrating the Legacy of Casals in His Beachfront Villa (By EMMA DALY, Sep. 19, 2001)
ARTS: Attacks Called Great Art [composer Karlheinz Stockhausen] (NY TIMES, Sep. 19, 2001)
BOOKS: 'THE POPES AGAINST THE JEWS': Challenging the Vatican on Role in Anti-Semitism
(By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, Sep. 19, 2001)
FILM: 'CHILDREN UNDERGROUND': Homeless and Helpless in Romania (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Sep. 19, 2001)
MUSIC: THE POP LIFE: After the Horror, Radio Stations Pull Some Songs (By NEIL STRAUSS, Sep. 19, 2001)
THEATER: Sales Plummet as Broadway Posts Losses (By JESSE McKINLEY, Sep. 19, 2001)
THEATER: 'LET'S FACE IT': Roundelay of Infidelity in a Cole Porter Revival (By BRUCE WEBER, Sep. 19, 2001)
THEATER: 'THE REVENGE TOUR': Sketching Characters With Humor (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Sep. 19, 2001)
* TV: Letterman Leads Talk Show Hosts Back on the Air (By BILL CARTER, Sep. 19, 2001)
HEALTH: Doctors Often Overlook Artery Disease in Limbs, Study Finds (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 19, 2001)

Tuesday, September 18, 2001:
On This Day: September 18 (Samuel Johnson 9/18/1709-12/13/1784, Jean-Bernard Foucault 9/18/1819-2/11/1868, Agnes de Mille 9/18/1905-10/7/1993, Edwin McMillan 9/18/1907-9/7/1991)
Defense Command Filled As 2 More Take Service Oath (By ANTHONY LEVIERO, September 18, 1947)
* Greta Garbo, 84, Screen Icon Who Fled Her Stardom, Dies [born 9/18/1905] (NY Times, April 16, 1990)
* Fred De Cordova, TV Producer, Dies at 90 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Sep. 18, 2001)
Glenn Fowler, Dies at 77, Realty Editor at Times (NY TIMES, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE PRESIDENT: Bush Delivers Message of Retaliation and Tolerance (By DAVID E. SANGER, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE PRESIDENT: U.S. Looks to Help Airlines Left Reeling After Attacks (By DAVID STOUT, Sep. 18, 2001)
DEFENDING THE NATION: All of a Sudden, a Jittery Nation of Checkpoints (By TIMOTHY EGAN, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE PLOT: Bin Laden Operative Is Linked to Suspects (By TIM GOLDEN with JUDITH MILLER, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE MILITARY: Pentagon Activates First Wave of Guardsmen and Reservists (By JAMES DAO & STEVEN LEE MYERS, Sep. 18, 2001)
SAFETY AND LIBERTY: Technology's Role to Grow in a New World of Security (By WILLIAM GLABERSON, Sep. 18, 2001)
VIOLENCE: Attacks and Harassment Continue on Middle Eastern People and Mosques
(By TAMAR LEWIN & GUSTAV NIEBUHR, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE CLERIC: Imam Had Unusual Visit at Mosque Before Attacks (By DOUGLAS JEHL, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE SUSPECT: Man Traveled Across U.S. in His Quest to Be a Pilot (By DAVID W. CHEN, Sep. 18, 2001)
CONGRESS: Ashcroft Wants Quick Action on Broader Wiretapping Plan (By PHILIP SHENON, Sep. 18, 2001)
PLACING BLAME: Falwell Apologizes for Saying an Angry God Allowed Attacks (By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, Sep. 18, 2001)
AFGHAN-AMERICANS: Group Struggling to Shed Association With Terrorism (By EVELYN NIEVES and PATRICIA LEIGH BROWN, Sep. 18, 2001)
* PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAUMA: Stress From Attacks Will Chase Some Into the Depths of Their Minds, and Stay
(By ERICA GOODE, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE RESOLUTION: Measure Backing Bush's Use of Force Is as Broad as a Declaration of War, Experts Say
(By NEIL A. LEWIS, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE PENNSYLVANIA CRASH: 44 Victims Are Remembered, and Lauded (By SARA RIMER, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE MATERIAL WITNESSES: F.B.I. Says More Warrants Issued (By CHRISTOPHER DREW, Sep. 18, 2001)
EUROPEANS: Blair and Chirac Heading to U.S. for Show of Unity (By JANE PERLEZ, Sep. 18, 2001)
French President Pledges Solidarity (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 18, 2001)
* HISTORY: For Ages, Afghanistan Is Not Easily Conquered (By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Sep. 18, 2001)
The Times Postpones Celebration of Its 150 Years (By JAMES BARRON, Sep. 18, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Wall Street Returns (NY TIMES, Sep. 18, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Securing the Skies (NY TIMES, Sep. 18, 2001)
EDITORIAL: 'The Birds Are on Fire' (NY TIMES, Sep. 18, 2001)
* OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: The Big Terrible (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Sep. 18, 2001)
* OP-ED: The Economy, Too, Will Recover (By STEPHEN S. ROACH, Sep. 18, 2001)
OP-ED: Pakistan's Choice (By HUSAIN HAQQANI, Sep. 18, 2001)
LETTERS: One Week Later: How to Answer the Horror? (By RITA LASAR et. al., Sep. 18, 2001)
* BUSINESS: THE OVERVIEW: Investors Worried About Fragile Economies
[Dow -685, Nasdaq -116] (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE FEDERAL RESERVE: 1/2-Point Reduction Fails to Halt Market's Slide (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Sep. 18, 2001)
* MARKET PLACE: On a Day Without Precedent, Bad Numbers Still Felt Good (By FLOYD NORRIS, Sep. 18, 2001)
WALL STREET: In New Homes or Old, Trading Again (By PATRICK McGEEHAN, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE RETURN: Companies Strain to Restore Sense of Normalcy (By GREG WINTER, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE SCENE: Wall Street Returns to Work, Finding Good in Falling Prices (By ALESSANDRA STANLEY with DIANA B. HENRIQUES, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE TRADING FLOOR: A Bear Stearns Stalwart Tries to Keep Things in Perspective (By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, Sep. 18, 2001)
* THE INVESTORS: Little Sign of Panic in Firm's Hot-Stove League (By MATT RICHTEL, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE BROKER: Investors Want to Buy, and Keep on Buying (By ROBERT D. HERSHEY Jr., Sep. 18, 2001)
THE AIRLINES: Spartan New Standard for Airlines and Most Fliers (By LAURENCE ZUCKERMAN and LAURA M. HOLSON, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE LOBBY: Airline Industry Confident About Bailout Plan (By LIZETTE ALVAREZ and PHILIP SHENON, Sep. 18, 2001)
COMMODITIES EXCHANGE: First Silence, Then Traders Start to Get in the Groove (By NEELA BANERJEE, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE VOICES: As a Shaken Stock Market Reopens, Many Shrug Off a Plunge and Wait (By N. R. KLEINFIELD with DANNY HAKIM, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE DEAL MAKER: Berkshire Moves Away From a Tender Offer (By FLOYD NORRIS, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE OPENING: Familiar Voice Before the Bell (By JACOB H. FRIES, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE SMALL BUSINESSES: In the Shadow of Wall Street, Merchants Look for Assistance (By LESLIE EATON & JOSEPH P. FRIED, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE INSURERS: Big Insurance Brokers Need Help After Trade Center Blast (By JOSEPH B. TREASTER and JENNIFER 8. LEE, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE WORKERS: Show of Pride as the Everyday Routine Resumes (By CHARLIE LeDUFF, Sep. 18, 2001)
* THE DAY TRADERS: Fast and Deep Losses for Speculators (By JAYSON BLAIR, Sep. 18, 2001)
* THE OPPORTUNISTS: Trying to Play the Angles in a Tragedy's Aftermath (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Sep. 18, 2001)
Oracle Sees Sales Off 15% in Key Software Category (By CHRIS GAITHER, Sep. 18, 2001)
ADVERTISING: Agencies Grapple With Changed Mood of Consumers (By STUART ELLIOTT, Sep. 18, 2001)
Attacks May Drain Income, Dow Jones Says (By REUTERS, Sep. 18, 2001)
Feeling the American Aftershock in Brazil (By JENNIFER L. RICH, Sep. 18, 2001)
* STYLE: Fashion Wonders What It Will Look Like Now (By GINIA BELLAFANTE, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE SKIES: Making Planes Safer by Making Fuels Safer (By WILLIAM J. BROAD, Sep. 19, 2001)
* THE FOUNDATION: Engineers Tackle Havoc Beneath Trade Center (By DENNIS OVERBYE, Sep. 18, 2001)
DESIGN: Defending Skyscrapers Against Terror (By KENNETH CHANG, Sep. 18, 2001)
* HAUNTING QUESTION: Did the Ban on Asbestos Lead to Loss of Life? (By JAMES GLANZ & ANDREW C. REVKIN, Sep. 18, 2001)
THE ENVIRONMENT: Dust Is a Problem, but the Risk Seems Small (By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Sep. 18, 2001)
Worn Spacecraft Takes on Another Challenge, Comet Borrelly (By WARREN E. LEARY, Sep. 18, 2001)
* After 120 Years, Puffins Are at Home Off Maine Coast (NY TIMES, Sep. 18, 2001)
OBSERVATORY: From Dust to Red Tide (By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Sep. 18, 2001)

Monday, September 17, 2001:
On This Day: September 17 (Frederick von Steuben 9/17/1730-11/28/1794, Mercy Jackson 9/17/1802-12/13/1877, David Dunbar Buick 9/17/1854-3/6/1929, Christian Lange 9/17/1869-12/11/1938, Rube Foster 9/17/1879-12/9/1930, William Carlos Williams 9/17/1883-3/4/1963, Sir Francis Chichester 9/17/1901-8/26/1972, Sir Frederick Ashton 9/17/1904-8/18/1988, Warren Burger 9/17/1907-6/25/1995, David Oistrakh 9/17/1908-19/24/1974, Hank Williams 9/17/1923-1/1/1953, David Huddleston 1930, Dorothy Loudon 1933, Ken Kesey 1935, David H. Souter 1939, John Ritter 1948, Cassandra Peterson 1951)
* Battle of Antietam Creek (NY Times, September 17, 1862)
Maureen Connolly, Tennis Star, Dies [9/17/1934-6/21/1969] (NY Times, June 22, 1969)
William I. Spencer, Leader in Evolution of Citibank, Dies at 84 (NY TIMES, Sep. 17, 2001)
George I. Reynolds, 85, Pioneer in Cable TV, Dies (NY TIMES, Sep. 17, 2001)
* THE PRESIDENT: Bush Says He Wants Capture of Bin Laden 'Dead or Alive' (By DAVID STOUT, Sep. 17, 2001)
* Cheney Describes His Nerve-Center Role in First Hours of Crisis (By ERIC SCHMITT, Sep. 17, 2001)
THE PLOT: Four People Flown to New York for Questioning in Connection With Attacks (By CHRISTOPHER DREW, Sep. 17, 2001)
THE FLAG: A Nation Binds Its Wound in Red, White and Blue (By RICK BRAGG, Sep. 17, 2001)
NATIONAL AIRPORT: Airport to Stay Shut for Now; Some Urge Permanent Move (By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM & PHILIP SHENON, Sep. 17, 2001)
THE NEIGHBOR: Pakistani Team Giving Afghans an Ultimatum (By JOHN F. BURNS, Sep. 17, 2001)
Unsolved Mystery Resurfaces in Montana: Who's Killing Cows (By JIM ROBBINS, Sep. 17, 2001)
Sikh Owner of Gas Station Is Fatally Shot in Rampage (By TAMAR LEWIN, Sep. 17, 2001)
EDITORIAL: President Bush's First Win (NY TIMES, Sep. 17, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Intelligence and Terrorism (NY TIMES, Sep. 17, 2001)
* EDITORIAL OBSERVER: NY Notes: 8 Million Survivors, in Need of Affection (By GAIL COLLINS, Sep. 17, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: A Look in the Mirror (By BOB HERBERT, Sep. 17, 2001)
OP-ED: ESSAY: Of Human Missiles (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Sep. 17, 2001)
OP-ED: Bush Faces the Greatest Test (By MICHAEL BESCHLOSS, Sep. 17, 2001)
LETTERS: The Moods of America: Grief, Rage, Resolve (By DAVID RICHMOND et. al., Sep. 17, 2001)
* BUSINESS: A Test of Confidence, With Communications and Power in Doubt (By ALEX BERENSON, Sep. 17, 2001)
* MARKET PLACE: An Inquiry on Stock Gains Yields Little (By FLOYD NORRIS & EDMUND L. ANDREWS, Sep. 17, 2001)
* THE INVESTORS: Bracing for Reaction When Trades Resume (By DANNY HAKIM, Sep. 17, 2001)
* THE ECONOMY: Officials Seek to Bolster Investor Confidence (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON with JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Sep. 17, 2001)
THE ASIAN MARKETS: Tokyo Index Dives and Japan Buys Dollars to Stem Yen Rise (By JAMES BROOKE, Sep. 17, 2001)
THE ADVERTISING: What's an Industry to Say to Skittish U.S. Travelers? (By STUART ELLIOTT, Sep. 17, 2001)
THE COMPETITION: CNN Rivals Criticize Its Tactics (By BILL CARTER, Sep. 17, 2001)
THE MOVIEGOERS: Americans, Seeking Escape, Look to Hollywood for Relief (By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, Sep. 17, 2001)
THE DEAL MAKERS: Attacks Are Seen Putting Damper on Mergers (By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN & JONATHAN D. GLATER, Sep. 17, 2001)
THE CHAIRMAN: Wall Street's Driven Steward Presses for Business as Usual (By ALESSANDRA STANLEY, Sep. 17, 2001)
THE MEDIA: Media Trying to Stem Losses With Dignity (By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK & STUART ELLIOTT, Sep. 17, 2001)
THE MAGAZINES: Editors Rush to Revise Long-Made Plans (By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, Sep. 17, 2001)
THE AIRLINES: Major Carriers, an Economic Casualty, Are Cutting Back (By PAM BELLUCK and LAURENCE ZUCKERMAN, Sep. 17, 2001)
* THE RECOVERY EXPERTS: Trying to Plan for the Unthinkable (By BARNABY J. FEDER, Sep. 17, 2001)
* NEW ECONOMY: Terror Tests the Fabric of the Communication Network (By ELI M. NOAM, Sep. 17, 2001)
* E-COMMERCE REPORT: Internet Surpasses Its Original Goal (By BOB TEDSECHI, Sep. 17, 2001)
THE SURVEILLANCE: Scouring the Internet in Search of the Tracks of Terrorists (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Sep. 17, 2001)
THE TECHNOLOGISTS: A Test Like None Before for the Computer Wizards (By AMY HARMON, Sep. 17, 2001)
ARTS: Arts Groups at a Tragedy's Center Try to Assess Where to Begin (By PETER MARKS & CAROL VOGEL, Sep. 17, 2001)
* ART CRITIC: The Solace in Sharing the Beauty of Great Art and Music (By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Sep. 17, 2001)
MUSIC: Older Works That Seemed Appropriate to the Moment (By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Sep. 17, 2001)
OPERA: City Opera, Trying to Recapture Its Concentration (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Sep. 17, 2001)
* TV NOTEBOOK: When Repetition Is Helpful Rather Than Annoying (By PATRICIA COHEN, Sep. 17, 2001)
TV: THE COVERAGE: Some Flawed Information Occasionally Creeps In (By JIM RUTENBERG, Sep. 17, 2001)
TV CRITIC: Thankful for the Escape of Television (By JULIE SALAMON, Sep. 17, 2001)

Sunday, September 16, 2001:
On This Day: September 16 (Squire Whipple 9/16/1804-3/15/1888, Albrecht Kossel 9/16/1853-7/5/1927, J. C. Penney 9/16/1875-2/12/1971, Clive Bell 9/16/1881-9/17/1964, Karen Horney 9/16/1885-12/4/1952, Jean Arp 9/16/1887-6/7/1966, Earl Carroll 9/16/1893-6/17/1948, Sir Alexander Korda 9/16/1893-1/23/1956, Laurence Peter 9/16/1919-1/12/1990, Janis Paige 1922, Lauren Bacall 1924, Rev. Robert Sculler 1926, Peter Falk 1927, George Chakiris 1933, Susan Ruttan 1948, Ed Begley Jr. 1949, Mickey Rourke 1956, David Copperfield 1956, Molly Shannon 1964)
Ford Offers Amnesty Program Requiring 2 Years Public Work; Defends His Nixon Pardon (By MARJORIE HUNTER, Sept. 16, 1974)
Railroad Man & "Empire Builder" J. J. Hill Dead At The Age of 77
[9/16/1838-5/29/1916] (NY Times, May 30, 1916)
Barbara Matera Dies at 72; Costumer for Stage and Screen (NY TIMES, Sep. 16, 2001)
Raymond E. Johnson, Radio Host, Dies at 90 (By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Sep. 16, 2001)
Jaroslav Drobny, a Star In Tennis and Olympic Hockey, Dies at 79 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 16, 2001)
George I. Reynolds, 85, Cable TV Pioneer, Is Dead (NY TIMES, Sep. 16, 2001)
* THE EVENTS: Four Days That Transformed a President, a Presidency and a Nation, for All Time (By DAVID E. SANGER & DON VAN NATTA Jr., Sep. 16, 2001)
* NEWS ANALYSIS: Bush Presidency Seems to Gain Legitimacy (By R. W. APPLE Jr., Sep. 16, 2001)
* THE ADMINISTRATION: Bush Warns That Coming Conflict Will Not Be Short (By ELAINE SCIOLINO, Sep. 16, 2001)
THE PUBLIC: Poll Finds Strong Support for U.S. Use of Military Force (By RICHARD L. BERKE & JANET ELDER, Sep. 16, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: F.B.I. Was Seeking 2 of the Hijacking Suspects at the Time of the Attacks
(By DAVID JOHNSTON & NEIL A. LEWIS, Sep. 16, 2001)
THE MILITARY: Pentagon Outlines Needs for Fighting Terrorism (By ERIC SCHMITT & THOM SHANKER, Sep. 16, 2001)
THE NATION'S SPIRIT: On Trek Home, a Driver Finds America Shares One Thought (By ANTHONY DePALMA, Sep. 16, 2001)
THE NERVOUS SKIES: As People Finally Fly Again, Anxiety Is Part of the Baggage (By BLAINE HARDEN, Sep. 16, 2001)
THE AIRPORTS: Concern Lingers as Limited Air Travel Resumes (By MICHAEL JANOFSKY, Sep. 16, 2001)
MISSED CUES: Saudi May Have Been Suspected in Error, Officials Say (By KEVIN SACK, Sep. 16, 2001)
* HOLLYWOOD: Scratching Violence for Family Fare and Patriotism (By BERNARD WEINRAUB, Sep. 16, 2001)
THE LONE VOICE: In One Vote, a Call for Restraint (By PHILIP SHENON, Sep. 16, 2001)
INTERNATIONAL MEMO: America Inspires Both Longing and Loathing in Arab World (By JOHN F. BURNS, Sep. 16, 2001)
THE INTELLIGENCE AGENCIES: Lawmakers See Need to Loosen Rules on C.I.A. (By JAMES RISEN, Sep. 16, 2001)
THE ORGANIZATION: Holy Warriors Escalate an Old War on a New Front
(By Judith Miller, Benjamin Weiser & Ralph Blumenthal, Sep. 16, 2001)
IN EUROPE: A Pause to Ponder Washington's Tough Talk (By SUZANNE DALEY, Sep. 16, 2001)
IN BEIJING: Waiting Nervously for Response (By ERIK ECKHOLM, Sep. 16, 2001)
IN MOSCOW: Russia Takes Stand Against Terrorism, but the Stance Wavers Quickly (By MICHAEL WINES, Sep. 16, 2001)
IN ISLAMABAD: Tension Grows as Pakistan Says It Plans No Military Role (By REUTERS, Sep. 16, 2001)
IN MONTREAL: A Sense of Foreboding in Canada's Diverse Muslim Haven (By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Sep. 16, 2001)
Many Pitfalls in Swiss Effort to Keep Out Tainted Money (By ELIZABETH OLSON, Sep. 16, 2001)
Taliban Opposition Confirms Death of Its Battle Commander (By BARRY BEARAK, Sep. 16, 2001)
* NY REGION: WALL STREET: Huge Obstacles as the Markets Try to Reopen (By LESLIE EATON & KIRK JOHNSON, Sep. 16, 2001)
NY: THE MILITARY: Despite a National Rush of Emotion, Recruiting Centers Aren't Seeing a Rush to Enlist
(By DAVID CAY JOHNSTON & AMY WALDMAN, Sep. 16, 2001)
THE HEROES: At 8:48, Two 'Normal Guys' Are Transformed (By MARY WILLIAMS WALSH, Sep. 16, 2001)
* THE COLLEGES: For Some, Return to Classes Is Uncertain (By KAREN W. ARENSON, Sep. 16, 2001)
GROUND ZERO: No Cover or Charge to Workers (By SHAILA K. DEWAN, Sep. 16, 2001)
THE NAMES: Snapshots of Their Lives, With the Pain and Love of Those Who Knew Them (NY TIMES, Sep. 16, 2001)
WEEK IN REVIEW: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 16, 2001)
* What Would 'Victory' Mean? (By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Sep. 16, 2001)
WAR ZONE: The Clamor of a Free People (By By LINDA GREENHOUSE, Sep. 16, 2001)
* In a Changing Skylline, a Sudden, Glaring Void (By MICHAEL J. LEWIS, Sep. 16, 2001)
* Agonized, New York Bends, but It Doesn't Break [E.B. White quotes]
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Sep. 16, 2001)
* This Time, The Scene Was Real (By NEAL GABLER, Sep. 16, 2001)
Awakening to Terror, and Asking the World for Help (By JOSEPH KAHN, Sep. 16, 2001)
* Defining a Leader First by His Words (By ADAM CLYMER, Sep. 16, 2001)
* Defining Cowardice (By CELESTINE BOHLEN, Sep. 16, 2001)
* Talking of the Towers [quotes from NYC Guide Books] (By KARI HASKELL, Sep. 16, 2001)
* VOICES IN THE WIND: A New Form of Grieving Evolves Over Last Goodbyes (By FRANCIS X. CLINES, Sep. 16, 2001)
* Order of Magnitude: The Toll and the Technology (By GEORGE JOHNSON, Sep. 16, 2001)
WORD FOR WORD: Last Words (By SCOTT VEALE, Sep. 16, 2001)
The Week That Wasn't (By HUBERT B. HERRING, Sep. 16, 2001)
* EDITORIAL: In for the Long Haul (NY TIMES, Sep. 16, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Faces Emerge (NY TIMES, Sep. 16, 2001)
* OP-ED: LIBERTIES: The Modernity of Evil (By MAUREEN DOWD, Sep. 16, 2001)
* OP-ED: RECKONINGS: Paying the Price (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Sep. 16, 2001)
* OP-ED: Fighting an Elusive Enemy (By DAVID M. KENNEDY, Sep. 16, 2001)
LETTERS: Weekend of Heartache: Let Us Honor the Dead (By JOHN J. HARRISON et. al., Sep. 16, 2001)
* BUSINESS: Sudden Sense of Insecurity at Many Companies (By LAURA M. HOLSON, Sep. 16, 2001)
A Response to This Crisis Couldn't Be Learned in an M.B.A. Class (By LESLIE WAYNE & LESLIE KAUFMAN, Sep. 16, 2001)
THE ECONOMY: A Gradual Slowdown Suddenly Becomes a Wrenching Halt
(By DAVID LEONHARDT & LOUIS UCHITELLE, Sep. 16, 2001)
* Wall St. Veterans Urging Caution (By ROBERT D. HERSHEY Jr., Sep. 16, 2001)
Ways to Cope When Vulnerabilities Are Laid Bare (By ELLYN SPRAGINS, Sep. 16, 2001)
* MARKET INSIGHT: New Strains, but Nothing the System Can't Handle (By James W. Paulsen, Sep. 16, 2001)
* MARKET WATCH: Buildings? Replaceable. But These Lives Aren't. (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Sep. 16, 2001)
* FLOYD NORRIS: Moving Past All Fears, in Markets and Life (By FLOYD NORRIS, Sep. 16, 2001)
THE RIGHT THING: Follow the Heart, or Toe The Line? (By JEFFREY L. SEGLIN, Sep. 16, 2001)
Up From the Ashes, One Firm Rebuilds (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Sep. 16, 2001)
Airlines' Bad Year Is Suddenly Looking Much, Much Worse (By MICHELINE MAYNARD, Sep. 16, 2001)
* ART: On an Adventure of Exotic Colors and Age-Old Art (By RITA REIF, Sep. 16, 2001)
ARTS: A Bold Québécois Who Blends Art With Technology (By DON SHEWEY, Sep. 16, 2001)
ARTS: In Quebec Culture, a Deep Skepticism of Tradition (By JACQUES GODBOUT, Sep. 16, 2001)
ARTS: In Miami, a Hot Spot of Art, the Temperature's Rising (By AMEI WALLACH, Sep. 16, 2001)
ART: Taking the Spirit of Brooklyn on a Florida Vacation (By EDWARD M. GOMEZ, Sep. 16, 2001)
* DANCE: Still Paying Heed to Graham's Cry [Pearl Lang] (By JENNIFER DUNNING, Sep. 16, 2001)
DANCE: The Thrilling Excruciations of Modern Dance (By APOLLINAIRE SCHERR, Sep. 16, 2001)
MUSIC: A Scrap of Beethoven Better Left Unheard? (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Sep. 16, 2001)
MUSIC: Townes Van Zandt: A Neglected Poet of Nothingness and Discontent (By ANTHONY DeCURTIS, Sep. 16, 2001)
OPERA: Staging Shakespeare, or Something Like It (By MATTHEW GUREWITSCH, Sep. 16, 2001)
* FILM: "Phonokinetoscope": Taking a Trip by Bicycle [Dr. Albert Hofmann]
(By APOLLINAIRE SCHERR, Sep. 16, 2001)
THEATER: Comedy That Starts in the Muscles (By RON JENKINS, Sep. 16, 2001)
THEATER: New Targets for the Muse of Gay Wit (By PETER MARKS, Sep. 16, 2001)
THEATER: A Briton Who's Mad About Musicals (By BARRY SINGER, Sep. 16, 2001)
TV: A Show About Nothing. Oh, and Superheroes. (By CRAIG TOMASHOFF, Sep. 16, 2001)
* STYLE: When Trivial Pursuits Aren't So (By JOHN LELAND, Sep. 16, 2001)
A Time to Wed or a Time to Postpone (By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Sep. 16, 2001)
* VIEW: An Insignificant Spectator (By BRUCE WEBER, Sep. 16, 2001)
* New York Drops Its Game Face (By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Sep. 16, 2001)
Fashion in Bad Times: Best Foot Forward (By WILLIAM NORWICH, Sep. 16, 2001)
NOTICED: A Brisk Trade in Souvenirs of the Time Before Tuesday (By WILLIAM GRIMES, Sep. 16, 2001)
ON THE STREET: Supporting Cast [Slide Show] (Photographs by BILL CUNNINGHAM, Sep. 16, 2001)
VOWS: Zelda Stern and Stanley Rosenzweig (By EMILY EAKIN, Sep. 16, 2001)
NY TIMES MAGAZINE: Contents (Sunday NY TIMES, Sep. 16, 2001)
* ON LANGUAGE: Screening the Novel Words of Harry Potter (By JEFFREY MCQUAIN, Sep. 16, 2001)
* Calculating the Loss and Blame in Silicon Valley (By PO BRONSON, Sep. 16, 2001)
Questions for Bill Ayers, ex-Weatherman, on Which Way the Wind Is Blowing (By HOPE REEVES, Sep. 16, 2001)
SALIENT FACTS: Alternative Energy (By ROBB MANDELBAUM, Sep. 16, 2001)
THE ETHICIST: Debased Ball (By RANDY COHEN, Sep. 16, 2001)
Jeff Zucker Is the Stunt Man at NBC (By LYNN HIRSCHBERG, Sep. 16, 2001)
* Studying Ichiro, Baseball's Most Elusive Right Fielder (By DAVID SHIELDS, Sep. 16, 2001)
Midnight's Children [X.P.— light-sensitivity disorder] (By LAWRENCE OSBORNE, Sep. 16, 2001)
My Ordeal in a Chinese Cell (By GAO ZHAN as told to ALIX SPIEGEL, Sep. 16, 2001)
* STYLE: The Great Call of China [Ming porcelain] (By PILAR VILADAS, Sep. 16, 2001)
FOOD: Blue and White: A Combination With Heavenly Overtones [2 recipes]
(By WILLIAM NORWICH, Sep. 16, 2001)
LIVES: In My Dying Son's Loneliness, I Saw My Own (By NASDIJJ, Sep. 16, 2001)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 16, 2001)
* Edna St. Vincent Millay: A Life on the Edge (By J. D. McCLATCHY, Sep. 16, 2001)
* Joyce Catol Oates's 'Middle Age': A.A.R.P. Recruits (By CLAIRE DEDERER, Sep. 16, 2001)
* HEALTH: COUNSELING: Some Therapists Caution That Trauma Services Could Backfire (By ERICA GOODE, Sep. 16, 2001)
HEALTH: Terror Attacks Put Off Surgery to Implant Artificial Heart (By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Sep. 16, 2001)

Saturday, September 15, 2001:
On This Day: September 15 (James Fenimore Cooper 9/15/1789-9/14/1851, Bruno Walter 9/15/1876-2/17/1962, Dame Agatha Christie 9/15/1890-1/12/1976, Jean Renoir 9/15/1894-2/12/1979, Norm Crosby 9/15/1927, Prince Harry 9/15/1984)
Birmingham Bomb Kills 4 Negro Girls In Church; Riots Flare; 2 Boys Slain
(By Claude Sitton, Sept. 15, 1963)
William Howard Taft Gained Peaks In Unusual Career, Dies at 72
[9/15/1857-3/8/1930] (NY Times, March 9, 1930)
Irving S. Shapiro, Dies at 85, Lawyer and Ex-Chairman of DuPont (By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH, Sep. 15, 2001)
Wilson Flagg, a Retired Admiral, Dies at 62 (NY TIMES, Sep. 15, 2001)
Robert Speisman, Executive, Dies at 48 (NY TIMES, Sep. 15, 2001)
Earl of Carnarvon, Royal Racing Manager, Dies at 77 (By PAUL LEWIS, Sep. 15, 2001)
THE SUSPECTS: F.B.I. Documents Detail the Movements of 19 Men Believed to Be Hijackers
(By DAVID FIRESTONE & DANA CANEDY, Sep. 14, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: Justice Dept. Identifies 19 Men as Suspected Hijackers
(By NEIL A. LEWIS & DAVID JOHNSTON, Sep. 14, 2001)
* SKY RULES: Pentagon Tracked Deadly Jet but Found No Way to Stop It (By MATTHEW L. WALD, Sep. 15, 2001)
THE HIJACKERS: A Terroist Profile Emerges That Confounds the Experts (By JODI WILGOREN, Sep. 15, 2001)
THE PENNSYLVANIA CRASH: Search goes On for Recorder as Passengers Are Eulogized
(By SARA RIMER & JERE LONGMAN, Sep. 15, 2001)
THE PENTAGON: Both Flight Recorders Are Recovered in the Rubble Left from Capital Crash
(By ELIZABETH BECKER, Sep. 15, 2001)
FLIGHT SCHOOL: Learning Where Suspects Studied Is 'Trickier Than It Sounds' (By KEVIN SACK, Sep. 15, 2001)
THE FLIGHTS: The Lives They Lost: Passengers & Crew of the Hijacked Jets (By DAVID W. CHEN with EVELYN NIEVES, Sep. 15, 2001)
THE COALITION: U.S. Demands Arab Countries 'Choose Sides' (By JANE PERLEZ, Sep. 15, 2001)
IN AFGHANISTAN: Taliban Leader Talks Tough, Saying 'I Am Ready for Sacrifice' (By BARRY BEARAK, Sep. 15, 2001)
THE PAKISTANIS: U.S. Demands Air and Land Access to Pakistan (By JOHN F. BURNS, Sep. 15, 2001)
IN INDIA: New Delhi Eager to Join U.S. in Fighting Terror (By CELIA W. DUGGER, Sep. 15, 2001)
THE SAUDIS: War Against Terror Tests Fragile Relations With U.S. (By NEIL MacFARQUHAR, Sep. 15, 2001)
ONE MAN'S ACCOUNT: The Sound Was 'Like a Jet Engine right in My Ear' (NY TIMES, Sep. 15, 2001)
THE VIGILS: Surrounded by Grief, People Around the World Pause and Turn to Prayer (By DAN BARRY, Sep. 15, 2001)
THE STRATEGY: Leaders Face Challenges Far Different from Those of Last Conflict (By TODD PURDUM, Sep. 15, 2001)
A DAY OF MOURNING: President, in New York, Offers ResoluteVows Atop the Rubble (By ROBERT D. McFADDEN, Sep. 15, 2001)
THE PROFITEERS: Tragedy Spawns Charity Fraud and Gasoline Price Gouging (By TIMOTHY EGAN, Sep. 15, 2001)
EDITORIAL: War Without Illusions (NY TIMES, Sep. 15, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Heroes Amid the Horror (NY TIMES, Sep. 15, 2001)
EDITORIAL OBSERVER: A Field Trip Before Planes Turned Into Missiles (By ANDRÉS MARTINEZ, Sep. 15, 2001)
* OP-ED: JOURNAL: The Day Before Tuesday (By FRANK RICH, Sep. 15, 2001)
* OP-ED: ABROAD AT HOME: Beware Unintended Results (By ANTHONY LEWIS, Sep. 15, 2001)
OP-ED: The Working Life of Two Towers (By RICHARD C. LEONE, Sep. 15, 2001)
OP-ED: Invest in Global Policing (By RONALD K. NOBLE, Sep. 15, 2001)
America Mourns, and Looks at the Path Ahead (By WILLIAM CRAIN et. al., Sep. 15, 2001)
* THE MARKETS: Nervous Traders Push European Shares Sharply Lower
[London -3.8%, France -5%, Germany -6.3%] (By ALAN COWELL, Sep. 15, 2001)
THE MEDIA: Death, Terror and Business Journalists (By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Sep. 15, 2001)
THE ROLODEX: Connections to a Tragedy: Creating a Record of Awful Days (By RIVA D. ATLAS, Sep. 15, 2001)
FINANCIAL STRUGGLE: Airlines, in Search of Relief, Warn of Bankruptcy (By LAURENCE ZUCKERMAN, Sep. 15, 2001)
S.E.C. Waives Some Rules to Try to Ease Market Volatility (By STEPHEN LABATON, Sep. 15, 2001)
* THE TRADING FIRM: Flinty Bond Trader Leads His Firm Out of the Rubble [Cantor Fitzgerald]
(By DIANA B. HENRIQUES & JENNIFER 8. LEE, Sep. 15, 2001)
THE OVERNIGHT SHIPPER: Back in the Air, FedEx Shakes Off a Grounding [3.5 million packages daily]
(By EMILY YELLIN, Sep. 15, 2001)
THE INSURANCE: For Insurers, Some Failures and Rate Jumps (By JOSEPH B. TREASTER, Sep. 15, 2001)
* One Contingency Plan in Action: Amex Bank Keeps Money Moving (By SAUL HANSELL, Sep. 15, 2001)
* ART: The Formula for Portraying Pain in Art (By SARAH BOXER, Sep. 15, 2001)
FILM: 'HARDBALL': Teaching Inner City Kids Baseball and (Sniff!) Life (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Sep. 15, 2001)
THEATER: Lights on, Broadway Dispels the Dark (By JESSE McKINLEY, Sep. 15, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 15, 2001)
* SKY WATCH: The Little Fox [Vulpecula] (By JOE RAO, Sep. 15, 2001)

Friday, September 14, 2001:
On This Day: September 14 (Luigi Cherubini 9/14/1760-3/15/1842, Alexander von Humboldt 9/14/1769-5/6/1859, Ivan Pavlov 9/14/1849-2/27/1936, Jan Masaryk 9/14/1886-3/10/1948, Karl Compton 9/14/1887-6/22/1954, Alan Bloom 9/14/1930-10/7/1992)
* Soviet Rocket Hits Moon After 35 Hours (By MAX FRANKEL, Sept. 14, 1959)
Margaret Sanger Is Dead at 82; Led Campaign for Birth Control [born 9/14/1879] (NY Times, September 7, 1966)
David Angell, a Creator and Writer for 'Frasier' Sitcom, Dies at 54 (NY TIMES, Sep. 14, 2001)
Christian Adams, Promoter for Wines, Dies at 37 (NY TIMES, Sep. 14, 2001)
Mara Sebrionsky Dvonch, Violinist, Dies at 87 (NY TIMES, Sep. 14, 2001)
Alvin Schwartz, an Owner of Helmsley-Spear, Dies at 89 (By ERIC PACE, Sep. 14, 2001)
Robert Pagent, 87, Dancer and Choreographer for Stage and TV, Dies (By EMILY EAKIN, Sep. 14, 2001)
* U.S. Says Hijackers Lived in the Open With Deadly Secret (By KEVIN SACK with JIM YARDLEY, Sep. 14, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: Authorities Have Learned the Identities of 18 Hijackers, Attorney General Says
(By JAMES RISEN & DON VAN NATTA Jr., Sep. 14, 2001)
* NEWS ANALYSIS: No Middle Ground (By R. W. APPLE Jr., Sep. 14, 2001)
* THE SUSPECT: Bin Laden: Child of Privilege Who Champions Holy War (By JUDITH MILLER, Sep. 14, 2001)
THE RESPONSE: A Vow to Erase Terrorist Networks ‹ bin Laden Is Singled Out (By ELISABETH BUMILLER & JANE PERLEZ, Sep. 14, 2001)
* THE CHEMICALS: Monitors Say Health Risk From Smoke Is Very Small (By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Sep. 14, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 14, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Rendezvous With Afghanistan (NY TIMES, Sep. 14, 2001)
* EDITORIAL: Mayor of the Moment (NY TIMES, Sep. 14, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Call (NY TIMES, Sep. 14, 2001)
* OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Smoking or Non-Smoking? (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Sep. 14, 2001)
* OP-ED: RECKONINGS: After the Horror (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Sep. 14, 2001)
* OP-ED: Struggling Against Fanaticism (By AMOS OZ, Sep. 14, 2001)
OP-ED CONTRIBUTORS: The Weak at War With the Strong (By RONALD STEEL, Sep. 14, 2001)
OP-ED: A Firefighter's Story (By DENNIS SMITH, Sep. 14, 2001)
LETTERS: Stories of a Stricken City, and a Grieving Land (By JULIA PERRY et. al., Sep. 14, 2001)
BUSINESS: Asia and Europe Have a Rebound [Gold $280 + $1.50]
[London +1.3%, Frankfurt +1.3%] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 14, 2001)
THE INVESTORS: A Full Reopening of Stock Trading Is Set for Monday (By ALEX BERENSON, Sep. 14, 2001)
* FLOYD NORRIS: Some Encouraging Signs While Waiting for Stocks to Trade (By FLOYD NORRIS, Sep. 14, 2001)
WALL STREET: Financial District Vows to Rise From the Ashes (By STEVE LOHR, Sep. 14, 2001)
In Bond Market, Investors Send Interest Rates Plummeting (By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Sep. 14, 2001)
THE ECONOMY: Some See Recession as Imminent After Terrorist Assaults (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON & LESLIE KAUFMAN, Sep. 14, 2001)
ADVERTISING: Agencies Walk Careful Line in Offering Condolences (By STUART ELLIOTT, Sep. 14, 2001)
CORPORATE RESPONSE: Multinationals Will Protect Workers, but Plan to Remain in Hot Zones
(By JULIAN E. BARNES & LAURA M. HOLSON, Sep. 14, 2001)
THE REGULATOR: In Eye of Storm, a Voice of Calm From Washington (By STEPHEN LABATON, Sep. 14, 2001)
* THE ARCHITECTS: Watching a Creation From Infancy to Rubble (By DANNY HAKIM, Sep. 14, 2001)
* THE PRESS: Wall Street Journal Finds a Way to Print (By FELICITY BARRINGER, Sep. 14, 2001)
THE LIABILITY: Airlines Seek Restrictions on Lawsuits Over Attacks (By JOSEPH B. TREASTER, Sep. 14, 2001)
COMMUNICATIONS: New Perspective on the Issue of Cell Phone Use in Planes (By SIMON ROMERO, Sep. 14, 2001)
Oracle's Reported Earnings Beat Estimates by a Penny (By CHRIS GAITHER, Sep. 14, 2001)
* ART: 'ALONG THE NILE': Postcards From Eternity (By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Sep. 14, 2001)
* ART: Chinese Paintings of a Dreamscape (By HOLLAND COTTER, Sep. 14, 2001)
* ART: CASPAR DAVID FRIEDRICH: The Primly Austere, and Occasionally Dark, Side of the Moon
(By ROBERTA SMITH, Sep. 14, 2001)
ART: BEN KATCHOR: Views of a Yiddish Past Spring Comically to Life (By GRACE GLUECK, Sep. 14, 2001)
ART: Now, Jersey City Has Room to Show Its Treasures [Ben Shahn] (By KEN JOHNSON, Sep. 14, 2001)
INSIDE ART: Museums' Windfall [Metropolitan & Philadelphia Museum of Art] (By CAROL VOGEL, Sep. 14, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'JACK': Winning the Business Game With a Few Basic Principles (By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, Sep. 14, 2001)
DANCE: 'Carmen' With Bugles, Drums and Horse (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Sep. 14, 2001)
FILM: CHINA: 'THE PANDA ADVENTURE': You've Seen Giant Pandas? Not This Giant (By A. O. SCOTT, Sep. 14, 2001)
FILM: 'KILL ME LATER': Ready to Die, and Then to Love (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Sep. 14, 2001)
FILM: 'HAIKU TUNNEL': Where Drama Is a Broken Fax Machine (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Sep. 14, 2001)
AT THE MOVIES: Get Ready? She Is Ready (By RICK LYMAN, Sep. 14, 2001)
FILM: 'A TRIAL IN PRAGUE': Loyalty to Communism Rewarded by Execution (By A. O. SCOTT, Sep. 14, 2001)
THEATER: 'LIFE IS RHYTHM': Dancing and Drumming, With Intelligent Feet (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Sep. 14, 2001)
THEATER: 'THE VOICE OF THE TURTLE': A Play Outside the Mainstream of Its Time and Ours
(By BRUCE WEBER, Sep. 14, 2001)
* TV: 'WALT: THE MAN BEHIND THE MYTH': In His Kingdom, Sun Always Shines (By JULIE SALAMON, Sep. 14, 2001)
THE OUTSIDER: The Meadowlands, Forever Changed (By JAMES GORMAN, Sep. 14, 2001)
TAKING THE CHILDREN: All for One! One for All! Everybody Up the Ladder! (By PETER M. NICHOLS, Sep. 14, 2001)
HEALTH: Artificial Heart Is Implanted in a Second Gravely Ill Man (By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Sep. 14, 2001)

Thursday, September 13, 2001:
On This Day: September 13 (Clara Schumann 9/13/1813-5/20/1896, Arnold Schoenberg 9/13/1874-7/13/1951, Sherwood Anderson 9/13/1876-3/8/1941)
Rabin and Arafat Seal Their Accord as Clinton Applauds 'Brave Gamble' (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Sept. 13, 1993)
Leadership, Personal Courage, Devotion to Troops Won for Pershing Affection of Nation [9/13/1860] (July 16, 1948)
Peter Ganci, Top Fire Chief, Dies at 54 in Tower Collapse (By GLENN COLLINS, Sep. 13, 2001)
William Feehan, Fire Dept. Leader, Dies at 71 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Sep. 13, 2001)
Barbara Olson, Advocate and Conservative Commentator, Dies at 45 (By NEIL A. LEWIS, Sep. 13, 2001)
Berry Berenson Perkins, Photographer and Fashion Plate, Dies at 53 (By CATHY HORYN, Sep. 13, 2001)
Mychal Judge, 68, Chaplain for Fire Dept. (NY TIMES, Sep. 13, 2001)
Daniel Lewin, Co-Founder of Akamai Technologies, Dies in Attack (By SETH SCHIESEL, Sep. 13, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Demands of Leadership (NY TIMES, Sep. 13, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Allies Against Terror (NY TIMES, Sep. 13, 2001)
* FOREIGN AFFAIRS: World War III (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Sep. 13, 2001)
* ESSAY: Inside the Bunker (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Sep. 13, 2001)
* IN AMERICA: 'It Wasn't a Dream' (By BOB HERBERT, Sep. 13, 2001)
LETTERS: A Numbing Search, and a Yearning for Answers (By ANNLINN GROSSMAN, Sep. 13, 2001)
* CIRCUITS: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 13, 2001)
STATE OF THE ART: Card-Size Cameras That (Mostly) Measure Up (By DAVID POGUE, Sep. 13, 2001)
* Better Networks: Look to Nature [ant behavior to improve Internet routing]
(By KATIE HAFNER, Sep. 13, 2001)
* Now, Follow the Bouncing Nucleotide [DNA music] (By CATHERINE GREENMAN, Sep. 13, 2001)
Q & A: Closing the Window on Pop-Up Advertising (By J.D. BIERSDORFER, Sep. 13, 2001)

Wednesday, September 12, 2001:
On This Day: September 12 (Lorenzo de Medici 9/12/1492-5/4/1519, H.L. Mencken 9/12/1880-1/29/1956, Maurice Chevalier 9/12/1888-1/1/1972, Alfred Knopf 9/12/1892-8/11/1984, Ben Shahn 9/12/1898-3/14/1969)
Steven Biko, Young Black Leader Dies in Detention in South Africa (By JOHN F. BURNS, Sept. 12, 1977)
Jesse Owens Dies of Cancer at 66; Hero of the 1936 Berlin Olympics [9/12/1913] (By FRANK LITSKY, April 1, 1980)
Wardell B. Pomeroy Dies at 87; Aided Kinsey's Studies on Sex (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Sep. 12, 2001)
Joseph Berliner, Professor and Author on Soviet Economy, Dies at 79 (By ERIC PACE, Sep. 12, 2001)
Richard Green, 87, Lawyer in Free-Speech Case (By ERIC PACE, Sep. 12, 2001)
* Hijacked Jets Destroy Twin Towers and Hit Pentagon (By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Sep. 12, 2001)
* A CREEPING HORROR: Buildings Burn and Fall as Onlookers Search for Elusive Safety (By N. R. KLEINFIELD, Sep. 12, 2001)
* A Hijacked Boeing 757 Slams Into the Pentagon (By DON VAN NATTA and LIZETTE ALVAREZ, Sep. 12, 2001)
* NEWS ANALYSIS: Nation Plunges Into Fight With Enemy Hard to Identify (By R. W. APPLE Jr., Sep. 12, 2001)
Bush Vows to Avenge Attacks (By JAMES BARRON, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE PENTAGON: No Survivors Are Expected in the Debris at the Pentagon (By DON VAN NATTA & LIZETTE ALVAREZ, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: Ashcroft Says Authorities Have 'Numerous Credible Leads' (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 12, 2001)
COMMERCIAL AVIATION: F.A.A. Extends Ban on Airline Flights (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE MILITARY: Forces on Highest Alert to Protect and Reassure (By THOM SHANKER & ERIC SCHMITT, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE PRESIDENT: A Somber Bush Says Terrorism Cannot Prevail (By ELISABETH BUMILLER with DAVID E. SANGER, Sep. 12, 2001)
Security Long a Concern at U.S. Airports (By CHRISTOPHER DREW & MATTHEW L. WALD, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE SUSPECTS: Intelligence Officials Think Group Headed by bin Laden (By JAMES RISEN & DAVID JOHNSTON, Sep. 12, 2001)
AN ASSESSMENT: When an Open Society Is Wielded as a Weapon Against Itself (By MICHAEL R. GORDON, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE BACKGROUND: A Trend Toward Attacks That Emphasize Deaths (By JOSEPH KAHN, Sep. 12, 2001)
WORLD'S REACTION: European Nations Stand With U.S., Ready to Respond (By STEVEN ERLANGER, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE ISRAELIS: Spilled Blood Is Seen as Bond That Draws 2 Nations Closer (By JAMES BENNET, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE MILITANT: America the Vulnerable Meets a Ruthless Enemy (By JOHN F. BURNS, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE AFGHANS: Condemning Attacks, Taliban Says bin Laden Not Involved (By BARRY BEARAK, Sep. 12, 2001)
OBSERVATION POST DORA JOURNAL: This Train Is Bound for Nowhere, for the Moment
(By JAMES BROOKE, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE THREAT: Bush Aides Say Attacks Don't Recast Shield Debate (By PATRICK E. TYLER, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE ARABS: Condemnations From Arab Governments, but Widely Different Attitudes on the Street
(By NEIL MacFARQUHAR, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE AIRLINES: Scores of U.S.-Bound Planes Are Diverted to Canadian Airports (By REUTERS, Sep. 12, 2001)
Reaction From Around the World (NY TIMES, Sep. 12, 2001)
* NY REGION: THE MOOD: A City of Quiet: Nothing Is Same One Day After (By N. R. KLEINFIELD, Sep. 12, 2001)
Fire Department Learns Cruel Toll: 350 Comrades (By KEVIN FLYNN, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE SEARCH: New York Rescuers Find Some Survivors (By TERENCE NEILAN, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE HOPES: Survivors Are Found in the Rubble (By DEAN E. MURPHY, Sep. 12, 2001)
SECURITY: Fear's Ripple: Closing Down, Tightening Up (By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE GOVERNMENT: Trying to Command an Emergency When the Emergency Command Center Is Gone (By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE TOWERS: Instincts to Flee Competed With Instructions to Remain (By MICHAEL MOSS and CHARLES V. BAGLI, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE CLEANUP: Challenges and Dangers in Disposing of Two Fallen Giants (By KIRK JOHNSON, Sep. 12, 2001)
OUR TOWNS: Unclaimed Cars in a Train Station Garage, in a Suburb Expecting the Worst (NY TIMES, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE SCENE: Below 14th Street, Silence but an Eerie Disquiet (By SUSAN SACHS, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE HUNT: Trying to Find a Name on a List of the Living (By BARBARA STEWART, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE MISSING: Hospital Treks, Fliers and the Cry: Have You Seen... ? (By JANE GROSS and JANNY SCOTT, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE CHILDREN: As Witnesses to Tragedy, Students Confront Fears (By ANEMONA HARTOCOLLIS, Sep. 12, 2001)
THE MORGUE: Truckload of Body Bags Hints at the Magnitude Of a Grisly Task Ahead (By JIM DWYER, Sep. 12, 2001)
* COPING: Trauma, Felt Directly or Not, Takes a Psychic Toll (By ERICA GOODE, Sep. 12, 2001)
* THE ICON: A Birth of Great Praise, a Death Beyond Words for a Symbol of Strength (By DAVID W. DUNLAP, Sep. 12, 2001)
* AN ESSAY: New York, New York, It's a Suffering Town, but Stoicism Runs in Its Veins
(By MAX FRANKEL, Sep. 12, 2001)
SPORTS: Stadiums Are Empty as Athletes Take a Timeout (By MURRAY CHASS, Sep. 12, 2001)
SPORTS: In Times of Crisis, Debates About Whether to Play Games (By RICHARD SANDOMIR, Sep. 12, 2001)
SPORTS: In Time, Games Can Offer Escape (By HARVEY ARATON, Sep. 12, 2001)
EDITORIAL: THE WAR AGAINST AMERICA: An Unfathomable Attack (NY TIMES, Sep. 12, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The National Defense (NY TIMES, Sep. 12, 2001)
OP-ED: ABROAD AT HOME: A Different World (By ANTHONY LEWIS, Sep. 12, 2001)
OP-ED: ESSAY: New Day of Infamy (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Sep. 12, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: Grave Silence (By MAUREEN DOWD, Sep. 12, 2001)
OP-ED: CORRESPONDENT: America's Emergency Line: 9/11 (By BILL KELLER, Sep. 12, 2001)
LETTERS: Dispatches From a Day of Terror and Shock [16 letters] (By ROLAND E. COWDEN et al., Sep. 12, 2001)
* Stocks Tumble Abroad; Exchanges in New York Never Opened for the Day (By FLOYD NORRIS & JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Sep. 12, 2001)
The Financial World Is Left Reeling by Attack (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON & STEPHEN LABATON, Sep. 12, 2001)
A Tragedy Adds More Confusion to the Outlook for U.S. Economy (By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Sep. 12, 2001)
Reinsurance Companies Wait to Sort Out Cost of Damages (By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN & SIMON ROMERO, Sep. 12, 2001)
As Important as the Corporate Disaster Plan Is How Fast the Employees Carry It Out
(By CONSTANCE L. HAYS, Sep. 12, 2001)
Absorbing a Blow to the Heart of America's Financial Center (By REED ABELSON, Sep. 12, 2001)
WORKPLACE: No Secret's Safe From These Sharp Eyes (By JONATHAN D. GLATER, Sep. 12, 2001)
LIFE'S WORK: Myself by Any Other Name (By LISA BELKIN, Sep. 12, 2001)
* ARTS ABROAD: Everyday Items in a Life Allow Lennon Fans to Imagine (By JAY BERMAN, Sep. 12, 2001)
* BOOKS: Displaying All of Oscar Wilde's Many Sides (By MEL GUSSOW, Sep. 12, 2001)
* BOOKS: A Last-Minute Letter Ends Up the First [Wilde's 1st letter] (By MEL GUSSOW, Sep. 12, 2001)
BOOKS: 'THE APPOINTMENT': Allegory of Oppression in Ceaucescu's Romania (By RICHARD EDER, Sep. 12, 2001)
DANCE: 'SHUNKIN': Alienation and Torment in the Artist's Life (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Sep. 12, 2001)
DANCE: Mark Morris Dance Center Adds Luster To Brooklyn (By CELESTINE BOHLEN, Sep. 12, 2001)
FILM: 'TELL ME SOMETHING': A Detective in Seoul Dogs a Killer's Trail (By A. O. SCOTT, Sep. 12, 2001)
MUSIC: MANDY PATINKIN: A World Where All Is Not Sweetness and Light (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Sep. 12, 2001)
TV: 'WOLF LAKE': A Nice Hometown Girl With Orange-Green Eyes (By RON WERTHEIMER, Sep. 12, 2001)

Tuesday, September 11, 2001:
On This Day: September 11 (O. Henry 9/11/1862-6/5/1910, D.H. Lawrence 9/11/1885-3/2/1930, Vinoba Bhave 9//1/1895-11/15/1982)
Allende Out, Reported Suicide; Marxist Regime In Chile Falls In Army's Violent Coup (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sept. 11, 1973)
Ferdinand Marcos, Ousted Leader Of Philippines, Dies at 72 in Exile [9/11/1917] (By JANE GROSS, Sept. 29, 1989)
Roger Starr, New York Planning Official, Author and Editorial Writer, Is Dead at 83 (By BRUCE LAMBERT, Sep. 11, 2001)
LETTERS: On Capitalism, by Jack Welch (By FRED LAZARE et. al., Sep. 11, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Spoiling the Broth (NY TIMES, Sep. 11, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Walls (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Sep. 11, 2001)
OP-ED: The Broken-Windows Myth (By BERNARD E. HARCOURT, Sep. 11, 2001)
OP-ED: Professors at the Color Line (By RICHARD CHAIT & CATHY TROWER, Sep. 11, 2001)
OP-ED: My Modern Life, Unplugged (By THEODORE S. CHAPIN, Sep. 11, 2001)
ARTS ABROAD: France's Shock Novelist Strikes Again (By ALAN RIDING, Sep. 11, 2001)
BOOKS: 'SAVAGE BEAUTY': Old-Fashioned Poetry but a Wild Life (By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Sep. 11, 2001)
BOOKS: Life With the Weathermen: No Regrets for a Love of Explosives (By DINITIA SMITH, Sep. 11, 2001)
DANCE: 'EXPLORATION OF MOVEMENT': Explosive Fusion of Styles for the Black Diaspora (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Sep. 11, 2001)
TV: 'THE MIND OF A MARRIED MAN': On a New HBO Series, Three Guys With One Thought (By JULIE SALAMON, Sep. 11, 2001)
FASHION: WOMEN'S COLLECTIONS: Some Things New, Mostly Borrowed (By CATHY HORYN, Sep. 11, 2001)
FASHION DIARY: Cutting a Conscience and, Oh Yes, Clothes Minus the Frippery (By GUY TREBAY, Sep. 11, 2001)
SCIENCE: Protect Sharks? Recent Attacks Fuel Old Argument (By WILLIAM J. BROAD, Sep. 11, 2001)
* Buckyball Success May Lead the Way to Practical New Superconductors (By KENNETH CHANG, Sep. 11, 2001)
* Physicists Strive to Build a Black Hole (By GEORGE JOHNSON, Sep. 11, 2001)
X-Ray Orbiter Becomes a Particle Physics Experiment (By JAMES GLANZ, Sep. 11, 2001)
E.P.A. Finds Some Soot Is Bad, Other Soot Is Worse (By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Sep. 11, 2001)
* Q & A: Asleep on Their Feet [Horses] (By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, Sep. 11, 2001)

Monday, September 10, 2001:
On This Day: September 10 (Sir John Soane 9/10/1753-1/20/1837, William T. Harris 9/10/1835-11/5/1909, Franz Werfel 9/10/1890-8/26/1945, Arthur Compton 9/10/1892-3/15/1962)
Troops Use Machine Gun on Boston Mob; 5,000 Guarding City as Riots Continue (NY Times, Sept. 10, 1919)
* Roger Maris is Dead at 51, Set Record Home Runs [9/10/1934-12/14/1985] (By JOSEPH DURSO, December 15, 1985)
Robert R. Nathan, Economist, Is Dead at 92 (By SETH SCHIESEL, Sep. 10, 2001)
Samuel H. Miller, 84, Pilot in Historic Passenger Jet Flight (By ERIC PACE, Sep. 10, 2001)
Francisco Rabal, Prominent Spanish Actor, Dies at 79 (NY TIMES, Sep. 10, 2001)
Study Says Little Has Changed in Views on Working Mothers (By TAMAR LEWIN, Sep. 10, 2001)
DESPERATE MEASURES: Parents of Troubled Youths Are Seeking Help at Any Cost (By SARA RIMER, Sep. 10, 2001)
EDUCATION: A Family's Story: The Long Road From Desperation to Graduation (By SARA RIMER, Sep. 10, 2001)
Shark Turns Tables on Angler With Bite (By REUTERS, Sep. 10, 2001)
Tough U.S. Visa Policy Angers Chinese Scholars (By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL, Sep. 10, 2001)
Pilot Who Saved 304 People Now Finds Heroism Tainted (By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Sep. 10, 2001)
When One Engine Will Do: Focus on Safety (By MATTHEW L. WALD, Sep. 10, 2001)
Crowd Sees Queen Mother [101 years old] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 10, 2001)
80% of Germany's Cable Systems Selling Abroad (By EDMUND L. ANDREWS, Sep. 10, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: TV Giants Court China for a Sliver of 1.2 Billion (By CRAIG S. SMITH with GERALDINE FABRIKANT, Sep. 10, 2001)
A Memory-Strewn Celebration of Germany's Jews (By STEVEN ERLANGER, Sep. 10, 2001)
* METROPOLITAN DIARY: Dear Diary ["Prince Charming" & "Hey Gorgeous"] (By ENID NEMY, Sep. 10, 2001)
NEW YORK HARBOR JOURNAL: Cruise Has Time to Repent and Time to Party (By COREY KILGANNON, Sep. 10, 2001)
MAYORAL DEBATE: Confronting the Economy's Future and Media Rumors (NY TIMES, Sep. 10, 2001)
At Historic Temple, a Joyous Revival [126-year old Central Synagogue] (By JOYCE WADLER, Sep. 10, 2001)
* SPORTS: Bonds Closing on McGwire's Record [Bonds hits 61, 62, 63 HR] (By MURRAY CHASS, Sep. 10, 2001)
SPORTS: Young Legs Beat Old Legs, Again [Lleyton Hewitt beats Sampas in US Open] (By GEORGE VECSEY, Sep. 10, 2001)
SPORTS: Hewitt Sprints Through Generation Gap (By SELENA ROBERTS, Sep. 10, 2001)
EDITORIAL: An Unhealthy Influence on Doctors (NY TIMES, Sep. 10, 2001)
OP-ED: ESSAY: Jimmy That 'Lockbox' (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Sep. 10, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: Obscuring the Real Issues (By BOB HERBERT, Sep. 10, 2001)
OP-ED: Jailers Who Thrive on Silence [monkeys & oxen] (By LI SHAOMIN, Sep. 10, 2001)
* OP-ED: The Pen of the C.E.O. [Jack Welch of General Electric] (By JEFFREY A. KRAMES, Sep. 10, 2001)
LETTERS: Finally, Big Women on Campus [College Presidents] (By CLAIRE VAN UMMERSEN et. al., Sep. 10, 2001)
LETTERS: Bookless in Moscow (By CATHERINE LEGOUIS, Sep. 10, 2001)
BUSINESS: Fear of Recession Ignites Discussion of More Tax Cuts (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Sep. 10, 2001)
AOL Time Warner Said to Be Pursuing AT&T's Cable Unit (By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN & GERALDINE FABRIKANT, Sep. 10, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: Struggling Dot-Com Company Gets Opportunity for a Second Act
(By ALEX BERENSON, Sep. 10, 2001)
Variety of Brash Magazines Upset the Old Stereotypes (By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Sep. 10, 2001)
* E-COMMERCE REPORT: Uncertain Future for Online Cards [Blue Mt Arts] (By BOB TEDESCHI, Sep. 10, 2001)
NEW ECONOMY: Slowdown in IT Equipment Sales Fuels Push Into Services Business (By HAL R. VARIAN, Sep. 10, 2001)
Pitch to Condit Raises Ethical Questions [Phil Bronstein] (By FELICITY BARRINGER, Sep. 10, 2001)
* The Wonder Years: Homework Is Free Online (By LAURIE J. FLYNN, Sep. 10, 2001)
MEDIA TALK: Summer Over, Editors Face Grim Return (By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Sep. 10, 2001)
MEDIA TALK: Tough Call on a Book by a Prison Inmate (By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Sep. 10, 2001)
COMPRESSED DATA: Essay Contests in Fray Involving Intellectual Property (By AMY HARMON, Sep. 10, 2001)
* COMPRESSED DATA: What's in a Name? Maybe a Stock Price (By FLOYD NORRIS, Sep. 10, 2001)
PATENTS: Video Heroines With Personality (By TERESA RIORDAN, Sep. 10, 2001)
U.S. Companies Sharply Reduce Orders for Tools (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Sep. 10, 2001)
Malpractice Rates Are Rising Sharply; Health Costs Follow (By JOSEPH B. TREASTER, Sep. 10, 2001)
ARTS ABROAD: Musings on Hate by a Serbian Filmmaker (By MELINDA HENNEBERGER, Sep. 10, 2001)
BOOKS: 'AVA'S MAN': A Hammer-Swinging Roofer in Appalachia (By THEODORE ROSENGARTEN, Sep. 10, 2001)
DANCE: Hairstyles and Other Traumas, in Motion (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Sep. 10, 2001)
FILM: As Hollywood Uses More Animals, Concerns Grow About Their Welfare (By RICK LYMAN, Sep. 10, 2001)
POP: MICHAEL JACKSON: A Cautious Return to His Throne (By JON PARELES, Sep. 10, 2001)
THEATER: 'FIRST LOVE': Older Lovers Running the Heart's Gamut (By BRUCE WEBER, Sep. 10, 2001)
* WRITERS ON WRITING: Overcome by Intensity, Redeemed by Effort (By HONOR MOORE, Sep. 10, 2001)

Sunday, September 9, 2001:
On This Day: September 9 (Luigi Galvani 9/9/1737-12/4/1798, James Hilton 9/9/1900-12/20/1954, Otis Redding 9/9/1941-12/10/1967)
* Mao Tse-Tung Dies In Peking At 82; Leader Of Red China Revolution (By REUTERS, September 9, 1976)
Alf Landon, G.O.P. Stand-Bearer, Dies at 100
[9/9/1887-10/12/1987] (NY Times, October 13, 1987)
Jim Drake, 63, an Organizer of Workers and a 60's Boycott, Dies (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Sep. 9, 2001)
Doris Calloway Dies at 78; Helped Set Nutrition Standards (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Sep. 9, 2001)
* Millie Almy, 86, Psychologist and Writer on Child Learning Is Dead (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Sep. 9, 2001)
EDITORIAL: 'Neutron Jack' Exits [Jack Welch of GE] (NY TIMES, Sep. 9, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: I Can't Take It Anymore (By MAUREEN DOWD, Sep. 9, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: Hold Him to It (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Sep. 9, 2001)
OP-ED: Coming to a Theater Near You... This Essay (By SPARROW, Sep. 9, 2001)
OP-ED: Sometimes the Economy Needs a Setback (By JAMES GRANT, Sep. 9, 2001)
In Unemployment Itself, a Hint of Hope for Japan (By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Sep. 9, 2001)
* BUSINESS: Stock Baskets Aim for the Mainstream (By PATRICK McGEEHAN, Sep. 9, 2001)
* Seeing Negative Signs in High Option Volume (By DAN COLARUSSO, Sep. 9, 2001)
* Eureka! I.B.M. Develops Labs With Profits (By BARNABY J. FEDER, Sep. 9, 2001)
Commerce Bancorp Chief Sweating the Nickels and Dimes (By JENNIFER REINGOLD, Sep. 9, 2001)
INVESTING WITH: Edward J. Goldstein and David L. Thompson of First Funds Growth & Income Portfolio
(By CAROLE GOULD, Sep. 9, 2001)
Cleaner Cars Are Here, if You Can Find Them (By MICHELINE MAYNARD, Sep. 9, 2001)
MARKET WATCH: A Self-Inflicted Wound Aggravates Angst Over Enron (By ALEX BERENSON, Sep. 9, 2001)
* ARTS: CONTENTS: The New Season (NY TIMES, Sep. 9, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY CRITIC: VICKI GOLDBERG: Photographing the Paradoxes of Pittsburgh (NY TIMES, Sep. 9, 2001)
POP: 'All Id' and Proud of It, Macy Gray Sings On (By JON PARELES, Sep. 9, 2001)
STYLE: King of Zebra Prints Is Riding High (By RUTH LA FERLA, Sep. 9, 2001)
NOTICED: Williamsmania Sweeps The Black A-List (By LIZ ROBBINS, Sep. 9, 2001)
PETROPOLIS: It's Now Public: Pet Owners Do Cry (By JULIE V. IOVINE, Sep. 9, 2001)
A NIGHT OUT WITH: Douglas Coupland: Escape From Gen X (By PHIL PATTON, Sep. 9, 2001)
OFF OFF FIFTH: The Fashionista as Sex Pistolera (By KAREN ROBINOVITZ, Sep. 9, 2001)
Trousers Inspired By a Living Room (By WILLIAM L. HAMILTON, Sep. 9, 2001)
FRONT ROW: The Heart Grows Fonder (By GINIA BELLAFANTE, Sep. 9, 2001)
Mysteries of Inspiration: Spring 2002 in the Making (By CATHY HORYN, Sep. 9, 2001)
ON THE STREET: A Spin Down Memory Lane [Slide Show] (Photographs By BILL CUNNINGHAM, Sep. 9, 2001)
VOWS: Pamela Ling and Judd Winick (By DEBRA A. KLEIN, Sep. 9, 2001)
* ON LANGUAGE: Their Infernal Priggery Aside, the Brits Couldn't Do It Without Us (By JESSE SHEIDLOWER, Sep. 9, 2001)
THE ETHICIST: On the Soapbox (By RANDY COHEN, Sep. 9, 2001)
FOOD DIARY: Eat Alone. It Could Be the Best Meal of Your Life (By AMANDA HESSER, Sep. 9, 2001)
FORUMS: Reader Discussion: 'What Beijing Can Learn From Moscow' (NY TIMES, Sep. 9, 2001)
* PHOTOGRAPHY ISSUE 2001 (SUNDAY NY TIMES, Sep. 9, 2001)
The Women Behind Photography's New Golden Age (By DEBORAH SOLOMON, Sep. 9, 2001)
* IN THE BALANCE: Women and Power in 2001 (By MARGARET TALBOT, Sep. 7, 2001)
SCIENCE: Study Suggests Soot Particle Size and Content Seem to Count (By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Sep. 9, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Sep. 9, 2001)

Saturday, September 8, 2001:
On This Day: September 8 (Ludovico Ariosto 9/8/1474-7/6/1533, Marin Mersenne 9/8/1588-9/1/1648, Frederic Mistral 9/8/1830-3/25/1914, Antonin Dvorak 9/8/1841-5/1/1904, Jessie Willcox Smith 9/8/1863-5/3/1935, Robert A. Taft 9/8/1889-7/31/1953, Jimmie Rodgers 9/8/1897-5/26/1933, Buck Leonard 9/8/1907-11/27/1997, Patsy Cline 9/8/1932-3/5/1963, Sid Caesar 1922, Wendell Ford 1924, Ann Beattie 1947, Heather Thomas 1957)
* Ford Gives Pardon To Nixon, Who Regrets 'My Mistakes' (By Hon Herbers, Sept. 8, 1974)
Claude Pepper, Fiery Fighter For Elderly Rights, Dies at 88
[9/8/1900-5/30/1989] (By REGINALD THOMAS, May 31, 1989)
Dr. Irving Rust, 71, Lead Plaintiff in Abortion Counseling Lawsuit, Dies (By WILLIAM H. HONAN, Sep. 8, 2001)
Norman D. Forster, 87, Owner of Léron, a Luxury Linen Shop, Is Dead (By ERIC PACE, Sep. 8, 2001)
Saying Too Many Are Losing Jobs, Bush Pushes His Policies (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Sep. 8, 2001)
EDITORIAL: A Buyer's Market for Work (NY TIMES, Sep. 8, 2001)
* OP-ED: ABROAD AT HOME: A Civilized Society [Italy] (By ANTHONY LEWIS, Sep. 8, 2001)
OP-ED: The Vanishing Surplus, Barely Noticed (By ANDREW KOHUT, Sep. 8, 2001)
OP-ED: The Squeeze on School Choice in New York (By CLARA HEMPHILL, Sep. 8, 2001)
LETTERS: Many Microsofts Weren't the Answer (By ALAN WALLACH et. al. , Sep. 8, 2001)
* BUSINESS: Stocks Slump on Fears Economy Won't Recover Quickly
[Dow -235, Nasdaq -18] (By FLOYD NORRIS, Sep. 8, 2001)
* Hewlett and Compaq, Under Fire, Stand by Deal (By CHRIS GAITHER, Sep. 8, 2001)
Jobless Rate Rises Sharply, to 4.9%; Bush Vows to Act (By DAVID LEONHARDT, Sep. 8, 2001)
Japan's Figures Officially Show a Contraction (By JAMES BROOKE, Sep. 8, 2001)
Court Weighs Easing Limits on Big Media (By STEPHEN LABATON, Sep. 8, 2001)
ARTS: This College Professor Can Fix Your Engine, Too (By EMILY EAKIN, Sep. 8, 2001)
ARTS: Torture Charge Pits Professor Vs. Professor in Chile (By CECILIA VALDES, Sep. 8, 2001)
* CONNECTIONS: Reading (Gasp) for Enlightenment, Without Snobbery or Shame (By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN, Sep. 8, 2001)
POP: Aaliyah: Haste, Errors and a Fallen Star (By KURT EICHENWALD with ROBIN POGREBIN, Sep. 8, 2001)
THEATER CRITIC: On 'The Lion King,' Second Thoughts on First Impressions (By BRUCE WEBER, Sep. 8, 2001)

Friday, September 7, 2001:
On This Day: September 7 (Elizabeth I 9/7/1533-3/24/1603, Elinor Wylie 9/7/1885-12/16/1928, Dame Edith Sitwell 9/7/1887-12/9/1964, David Packard 9/7/1912-3/26/1996, Sir Anthony Quayle 9/7/1913-10/20/1989)
* German Planes Raid London All Day; British Bomb Berlin, Starting Fires (By JAMES B. RESTON, Sept. 7, 1940)
* Grandma Moses Is Dead at 101; Primitive Artist 'Just Wore Out'
[9/7/1860-12/13/1961] (NY Times, December 14, 1961)
Justin Wilson, 87, Cajun Chef and Humorist, Dies (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 7, 2001)
Robert M. Brown, a Champion of Ecumenicalism, Dies at 81 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Sep. 7, 2001)
Cawood Ledford, Voice of Kentucky Sports, Dies at 75 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 7, 2001)
Dr. Edward Victor Zegarelli, an Authority on Mouth Diseases, Dies at 88 (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Sep. 7, 2001)
Heywood Hale Broun, a Writer With Flair, Dies at 83 (By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Sep. 7, 2001)
Florida Curbs the Operators of Popular Shark Excursions (By DANA CANEDY, Sep. 7, 2001)
F.B.I. Searches Internet Concern in Inquiry Into Mideast Terrorism (By JUDITH MILLER, Sep. 7, 2001)
A Region's Workers Go From Flush Time to Hard Times, Fast [Hickory, NC]
(By DAVID FIRESTONE, Sep. 7, 2001)
EDUCATION: State Colleges, Feeling Pinch, Cut Costs and Raise Tuitions (By JACQUES STEINBERG, Sep. 7, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Trying to Get Past Numbers on Stem Cells (By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, Sep. 7, 2001)
* Report Counts Computers in Majority of U.S. Homes [40% Internet connection]
(NY TIMES, Sep. 7, 2001)
* PERSEPOLIS JOURNAL: Shah's Tent City, Fit for Kings, May Lodge Tourists (By NEIL MacFARQUHAR, Sep. 7, 2001)
Fox Urges Congress to Grant Rights to Mexican Immigrants (By GINGER THOMPSON, Sep. 7, 2001)
Fireworks No Treat for Washington (NY TIMES, Sep. 7, 2001)
* NY REGION: Scoopful of Ice Cream to Help Truancy Go Down (By ANEMONA HARTOCOLLIS, Sep. 7, 2001)
* Buffalo Gazes Back to a Time When Fortune Shone [1901 exposition] (By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD, Sep. 7, 2001)
PUBLIC LIVES: Staging Her Third Act, Now as Couture Protagonist [Judy Licht]
(By ROBIN FINN, Sep. 7, 2001)
Here's the Windup: Pitcher Starts 8th Grade (By AMY WALDMAN, Sep. 7, 2001)
SPORTS: Bonds Becomes Fifth Player to Slug 60 Homers in a Season (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 7, 2001)
* EDITORIAL: The Weldon Connection [Bulgari ad in novel] (NY TIMES, Sep. 7, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Reforming Success (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Sep. 7, 2001)
OP-ED: China's Nuclear Agenda (By BATES GILL and JAMES MULVENON, Sep. 7, 2001)
OP-ED: A City Indebted to Its Émigrés (By SOLOMON VOLKOV, Sep. 7, 2001)
* LETTERS: Your Homework, Class: Read This (By MICHAEL N. EANES, Sep. 7, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Pendulum Swings to Microsoft, But How Far? (By STEVE LOHR, Sep. 7, 2001)
Intel Says Sales for the Quarter Are on Track (By CHRIS GAITHER, Sep. 7, 2001)
* Compaq and Hewlett Face More Skepticism (By MATT RICHTEL, Sep. 7, 2001)
* FLOYD NORRIS: With Analysts, You Get What You Pay For (By FLOYD NORRIS, Sep. 7, 2001)
2 Big Names in Hong Kong Get Some Rare Good News (By MARK LANDLER, Sep. 7, 2001)
ADVERTISING: A New Campaign for the N.F.L. (By STUART ELLIOTT, Sep. 7, 2001)
* ART: Displaying Hindu Ritual With Reverence and Graciousness (By ROBERTA SMITH, Sep. 7, 2001)
INSIDE ART: London Legend Plans to Close (By CAROL VOGEL, Sep. 7, 2001)
* ANTIQUES: A Croatian Chapel Full of Sculpture (By WENDY MOONAN, Sep. 7, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'EMERGENCE': Just Like Ants, Computers Learn From the Bottom Up (By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Sep. 7, 2001)
DESIGN REVIEW: Keeping Up With the Fashions Set by Royalty (By GRACE GLUECK, Sep. 7, 2001)
FAMILY FARE: A World of Animals [baboon language] (By LAUREL GRAEBER, Sep. 7, 2001)
FILM: 'ROCK STAR': Celebrating the Love of Bad Rock in the 80's (By A. O. SCOTT, Sep. 7, 2001)
FILM: 'TWO CAN PLAY THAT GAME': Rule No. 1: Don't Tolerate Straying Boyfriends
(By A. O. SCOTT, Sep. 7, 2001)
FILM: 'BOUNCE: BEHIND THE VELVET ROPE': Muscling In and Letting Anger Out the Door (By DAVE KEHR, Sep. 7, 2001)
MUSIC: 'FOUR CENTURIES OF SWING': A Free Spirit Romps in the Music Room (By ALLAN KOZINN, Sep. 7, 2001)
Restaging Wagner: A Stormy Destiny (By ROBIN POGREBIN, Sep. 8, 2001)
* PHOTOGRAPHY: KIM SOOJA: Serenity in the Thick of Things (By KEN JOHNSON, Sep. 7, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY: The Epic and the Surreal in Cuba (By HOLLAND COTTER, Sep. 7, 2001)
THEATER: ON STAGE AND OFF: Starting Guns Are Loaded (By JESSE MCKINLEY, Sep. 7, 2001)
TV: CNN Hires Show's Host Fired by Fox [Paula Zahn] (By BILL CARTER, Sep. 7, 2001)
TV: 'BAND OF BROTHERS': An Intricate Tapestry of a Heroic Age (By CARYN JAMES, Sep. 7, 2001)
* WEEKEND EXCURSION: As Beauty Meets Death [Shenandoah & Potomac Rivers]
(By DIANE COLE, Sep. 7, 2001)
THE OUTSIDER: The Pleasures and Treasures of the Shore [catching small sharks]
(By JAMES GORMAN, Sep. 7, 2001)
HEALTH: Gain in Hunt for How a Flu Turns Lethal (By GINA KOLATA, Sep. 7, 2001)
SCIENCE: Virus Is Killing Thousands of Salmon (By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Sep. 7, 2001)

Thursday, September 6, 2001:
On This Day: September 6 (Lafayette 9/6/1757-5/20/1834, Joseph P. Kennedy 9/6/1888-11/18/1969, Claire Chennault 9/6/1890-7/27/1958, Luis Leloir 9/6/1906-12/2/1987)
* President McKinley Shot at Buffalo Fair (NY Times, Sept. 6, 1901)
Jane Addams A Foe of War and Need [9/6/1860-5/21/1935] (NY Times, May 22, 1935)
James Lopez Watson, 79, Judge on U.S. Trade Court, Dies (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Sep. 6, 2001)
Sheldon Datz, 74, Pioneer in Molecular Chemistry, Dies (By KENNETH CHANG, Sep. 6, 2001)
Leonard Wright Jr., 78, Writer Who Dared to Change Fishing, Is Dead (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Sep. 6, 2001)
George M. Skurla, Grumman Executive, Dies at 80 (By MILT FREUDENHEIM, Sep. 6, 2001)
Shark Attacks Prompt Scrutiny by Virginia and Florida Officials (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 6, 2001)
In Coffin-Making, an Abbey Finds Fiscal Rebirth (By DAN BARRY, Sep. 6, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Debating Politics of the Surplus (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Sep. 6, 2001)
Mexico President Urges U.S. to Act Soon on Migrants (By GINGER THOMPSON, Sep. 6, 2001)
A Spicy Welcome to the White House (By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS, Sep. 6, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Statistical Shark (NY TIMES, Sep. 6, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: Doomed to Irrelevance (By BOB HERBERT, Sep. 6, 2001)
OP-ED: ESSAY: Ariel Sharon in Moscow (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Sep. 6, 2001)
OP-ED: Research Not to Be Hidden [anthrax] (By ELISA D. HARRIS, Sep. 6, 2001)
* OP-ED: My Principles, My Minivan [Weldon's novel deal] (By MELVIN JULES BUKIET, Sep. 6, 2001)
BUSINESS: Wall St. Drifts Aimlessly, With the Dow Gaining 35.78
[Dow +36, Nasdaq -12] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 6, 2001)
* ECONOMIC SCENE: A Vital Economy Suffers Fools Gladly (By VIRGINIA POSTREL, Sep. 6, 2001)
At G.E., Whither the House Jack Built? (By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH, Sep. 6, 2001)
ARTS ABROAD: Polanski Film About Holocaust and Suffering in Poland (By PETER S. GREEN, Sep. 6, 2001)
BOOKS: 'IN THE FLOYD ARCHIVES': An Analytic Casebook Full of Animal Instincts
(By JENNY LYN BADER, Sep. 6, 2001)
MUSIC CRITIC: Hearing a Composer Practice What He Taught (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Sep. 6, 2001)
TV: Concerned Parent With a Camera, Aimed at Schools (By BERNARD WEINRAUB, Sep. 6, 2001)
TV: 'REVENGE OF THE WHALE': Gory Details of Surviving Whaler Wrecked in 1819 (By NEIL GENZLINGER, Sep. 6, 2001)
TV CRITIC: Telling the Story of Congo's War, Amid the Chaos (By JULIE SALAMON, Sep. 6, 2001)
* HOME: Under the Spell of Jefferson (By BRADFORD McKEE, Sep. 6, 2001)
HOME: Where Bigger Was Better, Small Wonders in the Hamptons (By ALASTAIR GORDON, Sep. 6, 2001)
HOME: Doing Palladio Proud (in Concrete) (By DIANE DORRANS SAEKS, Sep. 6, 2001)
GARDEN Q & A: Vacation Souvenirs, Part 1 (By DORA GALITZKI, Sep. 6, 2001)
* SCIENCE: Evidence Found of Black Hole at Center of the Milky Way (By JAMES GLANZ, Sep. 6, 2001)
New Evidence of Early Humans Unearthed in Russia's North (By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Sep. 6, 2001)
* CIRCUITS: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 6, 2001)
STATE OF THE ART: Windows XP: Microsoft's New Look for Fall, in Size XXL (By DAVID POGUE, Sep. 6, 2001)
* Do Search Engines Expedite the Theft of Digital Images? (By LISA GUERNSEY, Sep. 6, 2001)
* BASICS: How to Move the Home Page to a New Home (By SUSAN STELLIN, Sep. 6, 2001)
Setting Out the Snares for Hackers (By JENNIFER 8. LEE, Sep. 6, 2001)
Q & A: A Crisp Web Image Via the Printer (By J.D. BIERSDORFER, Sep. 6, 2001)

Wednesday, September 5, 2001:
On This Day: September 5 (Tommaso Campanella 9/5/1568-5/21/1639, Giacomo Meyerbeer 9/5/1791-5/2/1864, A.C. Nielsen 9/5/1897-6/1/1980, Darryl Zanuck 9/5/1902-12/22/1979, Arthur Koestler 9/5/1905-3/3/1983)
9 Israelis on Olympic Team Killed with 4 Arab Captors as Police Fight Band That Disrupted Munich Games
(By DAVID BINDER, Sept. 5, 1972)
* John Cage, 79, a Minimalist Enchanted With Sound, Dies
[9/5/1912-8/12/1992] (By ALLAN KOZINN, August 13, 1992)
Rev. James Ford, 70, Chaplain of U.S. House of Representatives (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 5, 2001)
Julian Scheer, a Leader in Selling the Space Program, Dies at 75 (NY TIMES, Sep. 5, 2001)
Sir Arthur Gilbert Dies at 88; Gave Art Objects for Museum (By ALAN RIDING, Sep. 5, 2001)
Philippe Leotard, Actor, Dies at 60 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 5, 2001)
Thomas Dewart, 90, Publisher of The Sun, Is Dead (NY TIMES Sep. 5, 2001)
Western TV May Be Nearer for Chinese (By GERALDINE FABRIKANT with CRAIG S. SMITH, Sep. 5, 2001)
U.S. Restates Its Stand on Missiles in China (By DAVID E. SANGER, Sep. 5, 2001)
* EDUCATION: From Champ Gymnast to Medical School Mentor (By LYNETTE HOLLOWAY, Sep. 5, 2001)
* PUBLIC LIVES: Archiving the Past, but Embracing the Future [NY Public Library] (By JOHN KIFNER, Sep. 5, 2001)
* EDITORIAL: Back to the Garage, Again [HP-Compaq merger] (NY TIMES, Sep. 5, 2001)
* OP-ED: LIBERTIES: His Magnificent Obsession (By MAUREEN DOWD, Sep. 5, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: Don't Count on It (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Sep. 5, 2001)
OP-ED: National Secrets, Too Frequently Told (By WILLIAM S. COHEN, Sep. 5, 2001)
OP-ED: Israel's Mistake at Durban (By MICHAEL LERNER, Sep. 5, 2001)
LETTERS: A Gem of a Book [Fay Weldon's novel sponsored by Bulgari] (By JONATHAN D. REICHMAN, Sep. 5, 2001)
BUSINESS: Early Rally Mostly Fades As Tech Shares Stumble
[Dow +48, Nasdaq -35] (By MICHAEL BRICK, Sep. 5, 2001)
* Can Hewlett-Compaq Succeed Beyond PC's? (By MATT RICHTEL, Sep. 5, 2001)
* MARKET PLACE: Wall St. Finds Fault With Computer Merger (By FLOYD NORRIS & ANDREW ROSS SORKIN, Sep. 5, 2001)
THE STRATEGY: Bold Move Will Test Executive's Skill (By STEVE LOHR, Sep. 5, 2001)
THE CONSUMER IMPACT: Few Details on What Deal Might Mean to PC Users (By CHRIS GAITHER, Sep. 5, 2001)
THE VIEW FROM TEXAS: Once-Strong Pillar of Houston's Economy Looks Shaky (By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr., Sep. 5, 2001)
* TRACKS IN CYBERSPACE: As Big PC Brother Watches, Users Encounter Frustration (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Sep. 5, 2001)
* The Browser as a Cookie-Control Key (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Sep. 5, 2001)
* How to Say No to Cookies (NY TIMES, Sep. 5, 2001)
4 Publishers Agree to Sale of E-Books on Yahoo (By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Sep. 5, 2001)
Dollar Rallies; Interest Rates Rise Sharply (By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Sep. 5, 2001)
* MANAGEMENT: Recipe for a Business Best Seller: Analogies About Anything but Business (By JULIE FLAHERTY, Sep. 5, 2001)
For This Doctor, the Body Is a Canvas (By JILL HAZEN, Sep. 5, 2001)
THE BOSS: Theater, Old Friends and Merit Badges (By DAVID ROCKWELL, Sep. 5, 2001)
* Dot-Commers Trade Options for Books [back to school] (By AMIE PARNES, Sep. 5, 2001)
ADVERTISING: Fuji and Kodak Trying to Expand Their Images (By CLAUDIA DEUTSCH, Sep. 5, 2001)
Study Details Decline in Spending on Ads [GM $1.1 billion, AOL-Time Warner $734 million]
(NY TIMES, Sep. 5, 2001)
Larry King's Weekly Column for USA Today to Be Dropped (By FELICITY BARRINGER, Sep. 5, 2001)
ARTS: Where Elvis, Gamblers and Neon Are Cultural Treasures (By STEPHEN KINZER, Sep. 5, 2001)
ARTS ABROAD: Psst, Comrade, Check Out the Erotica in the State Library (By JOSEPHINE SCHMIDT, Sep. 5, 2001)
BOOKS: 'THE RIDDLE OF THE COMPASS': The Invention That Led Sailors Not to Feel at Sea
(By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, Sep. 5, 2001)
FILM: 'DJOMEH': Finding Depth in Simplicity in Rural Iran (By A. O. SCOTT, Sep. 5, 2001)
THE POP LIFE: Serbian Horns, Blaring for Joy (By NEIL STRAUSS, Sep. 5, 2001)
TV: 'THE AMAZING RACE' AND 'LOST': When Reality Means Bungee Jumping to Save Minutes (By ANITA GATES, Sep. 5, 2001)
Bensonhurst to Hollywood in One Leap for Actor, 17 (By BERNARD WEINRAUB, Sep. 5, 2001)
DINING: Today's Special? Discounts All Around (By FLORENCE FABRICANT, Sep. 5, 2001)
* EATING WELL: Fruit: Summer's Bounty, the Kitchen's Alchemy (By MARIAN BURROS, Sep. 5, 2001)
THE CHEF: Tom Colicchio: A Wedding Chowder [Corn & Seafood Chowder] (By Tom Colicchio with Florence Fabricant, Sep. 5, 2001)
THE MINIMALIST: The Steak That Swam to Dinner [Tuna au Poivre] (By MARK BITTMAN, Sep. 5, 2001)
FOOD: WINE TALK: In France, Few Pickers May Mean No Nouveau (By FRANK J. PRIAL, Sep. 5, 2001)
FOOD: EN ROUTE | FRANCE: Finding Perfection in a Lumpy Little Round of Cheese (By R. W. APPLE Jr., Sep. 5, 2001)
SCIENCE: Scientists Say Frenzy Over Shark Attacks Is Unwarranted (By WILLIAM J. BROAD, Sep. 5, 2001)
Report Warns Against Plan for Changes in Astronomy (By JAMES GLANZ, Sep. 5, 2001)

Tuesday, September 4, 2001:
On This Day: September 4 (Francois Chateaubriand 9/4/1768-7/4/1848, Anton Bruckner 9/4/1824-10/11/1896, Daniel Burnham 9/4/1846-6/1/1912, John Dillon 9/4/1851-8/4/1927, Simon Lake 9/4/1866-6/23/1945, La Argentina 9/4/1890-7/18/1936, Mary Renault 9/4/1905-12/13/1983, Edward Dmytryk 9/4/1908-7/1/1999, Henry Ford II 9/4/1917-9/29/1987, Paul Harvey 1918, Howard Morris 1919, Mitzi Gaynor 1931, Merald "Bubba" Knight 1942, Jennifer Salt 1944, Tom Watson 1949, Khandi Alexander 1957, Wes Bentley 1978)
Arkansas Troops Bar Negro Pupils; Governor Defiant (By BENJAMIN FINE, Sept. 4, 1957)
Richard Wright, Writer, 52, Dies [9/4/1908-11/28/1960] (NY Times, November 30, 1960)
* Pauline Kael, Provocative and Widely Imitated Film Critic, Dies at 82 (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Sep. 4, 2001)
Crash Davis, 'Bull Durham' Model, Dies at 82 (By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Sep. 4, 2001)
Capt. Jack Bennett, a Berlin Airlift Hero, Dies (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Sep. 4, 2001)
Ida Russ Schwartz, 86, a Purveyor of Delicacies, Dies (By MIMI SHERATON, Sep. 4, 2001)
You Can Tailgate a 90-Year-Old Driver, but Not When She's in the Cockpit (NY TIMES, Sep. 4, 2001)
NY REGION: THE BIG CITY: Hypocrisy Is So Sexy In a Call Girl (By JOHN TIERNEY, Sep. 4, 2001)
Parade Has Carnival's Spirit, but New York's Rules (By SOMINI SENGUPTA, Sep. 4, 2001)
EDITOTRIAL: Women at the Top of Academe (NY TIMES, Sep. 4, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: How About Sending NATO Somewhere Important? (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Sep. 4, 2001)
OP-ED: Recovering Japan's Wartime Past - and Ours (By STEVEN C. CLEMONS, Sep. 4, 2001)
OP-ED: More Trust on Both Sides of the Border (By VICENTE FOX, Sep. 4, 2001)
* Hewlett-Packard to Acquire Compaq in $25 Billion Deal (By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN & FLOYD NORRIS, Sep. 4, 2001)
* TRACKS IN CYBERSPACE: Giving the Web a Memory Cost Its Users Privacy (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Sep. 4, 2001)
* Using Software to Sniff Out Electronic Evidence (By JONATHAN D. GLATER, Sep. 4, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: Fixed Rate Mortgages Are Close to Lowest Point in 2 Years (By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Sep. 4, 2001)
ARTS: Documenting the Bowery, or at Least Its Remnants (By DOREEN CARVAJAL, Sep. 4, 2001)
ARTS: The Lure of the Roof Is More Than Just Tar Beach (By DAVID JAY LASKY, Sep. 4, 2001)
ARTS: For Regional Museums, a Novel Franco-American Artistic Exchange (By PAULA DEITZ, Sep. 4, 2001)
STYLE: Mysteries of Inspiration: Spring 2002 in the Making (By CATHY HORYN, Sep. 4, 2001)
STYLE: FRONT ROW: The Heart Grows Fonder (By GINIA BELLAFANTE, Sep. 4, 2001)
SCIENCE: The Map That Named America May Now Call It Home (By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Sep. 4, 2001)
Alien Species Often Fit In Fine, Some Scientists Contend (By MARK DERR, Sep. 4, 2001)
* Eyeless Creature Turns Out to Be All Eyes (By JONATHAN ABRAHAM, Sep. 4, 2001)
If Oak Malady Moves East, Many Trees Could Die (By MARY M. WOODSEN, Sep. 4, 2001)
Undersea, Cannibalism as Population Control (By JONATHAN ABRAHAM, Sep. 4, 2001)
* Motorola Makes Chip Breakthrough (By BARNABY J. FEDER, Sep. 4, 2001)
Seizing on a Homely Fish to Save a Regal One (By JAMES STERNGOLD, Sep. 4, 2001)
LETTERS: A Triumph of Management [Scott & Amundsen] (By DR. MARION K. PINSDORF et. al., Sep. 4, 2001)
HEALTH: Team Says It Coaxed Human Stem Cells to Produce Blood (By NICHOLAS WADE, Sep. 4, 2001)
Unlikely Guide to End-of-Life Decisions, Computer Eases Way (By JOHN A. CUTTER, Sep. 4, 2001)
* VITAL SIGNS: Diagnosis: Dental Exam May Offer Clues on Stroke (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Sep. 4, 2001)
Reactions: Sometimes, Generic Drug Swaps Matter (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Sep. 4, 2001)
Remedies: Assurances on Snake-Bite Treatment (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Sep. 4, 2001)
BOOKS ON HEALTH: Boys and Girls: Separating Truth and Myth (By JOHN LANGONE, Sep. 4, 2001)
BOOKS ON HEALTH: 10 Brutal Battles of Medical Heavyweights (By JOHN LANGONE, Sep. 4, 2001)

Monday, September 3, 2001:
On This Day: September 3 (Diane De Poitiers 9/3/1499-4/22/1566, Louis Sullivan 9/3/1856-4/14/1924, Sir Macfarlane Burnet 9/3/1899-8/31/1985, Loren Eiseley 9/3/1907-7/9/1977)
Viking 2 Lander Settles On Mars And Sends Signal (By WALTER SULLIVAN, Sept. 3, 1976)
Sarah Orne Jewett, Noted Writer, Dead [9/3/1849-6/24/1909] (NY Times, June 25, 1909)
* Pauline Kael, Provocative and Widely Imitated New Yorker Film Critic, Dies at 82 (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Sep. 3, 2001)
* Christiaan Barnard, Surgeon for First Heart Transplant, Dies (By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Sep. 3, 2001)
Jimmy Jones, Creator of Racing Dynasty at Calumet Farm, Dies at 94 (By JOSEPH DURSO, Sep. 3, 2001)
Troy Donahue, Film Star Who Could Make Hearts Flutter, Dies at 65 (NY TIMES, Sep. 3, 2001)
Leonard M. Wright Jr., Who Dared to Suggest New Way to Fish, Dies at 78 (NY TIMES, WOLFGANG SAXON, Sep. 3, 2001)
John Chambers, Master of Film Makeup, Dies at 78 (NY TIMES, Sep. 3, 2001)
* TUNBRIDGE JOURNAL: A Vermont Version of Schwab's Lunch Counter (By SARA RIMER, Sep. 3, 2001)
Shark Attack at Beach in Virginia Kills Boy, 10 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 3, 2001)
Putin, Sizing Up Bush, Says the Retinue 'Makes the King' (By PATRICK E. TYLER, Sep. 3, 2001)
Oh, Europe! Carrying On Like, Well, the Americans (By STEVEN ERLANGER, Sep. 3, 2001)
* KUDUS JOURNAL: A Good Cigarette Is a Fantasy of Flavor (By SETH MYDANS, Sep. 3, 2001)
Britain Faces Flurry of Illegal Migrants Using Channel Tunnel (By ALAN COWELL, Sep. 3, 2001)
* METROPOLITAN DIARY: Dear Diary [subway "acrobat" with pizza & coffee] (By ENID NEMY, Sep. 3, 2001)
* METRO MATTERS: For Fame, Try Pitching, Not Debating (By JOYCE PURNICK, Sep. 3, 2001)
Despite a Heavily Asian District, Chinese-American Candidates Are Still Lagging (By SHAILA K. DEWAN, Sep. 3, 2001)
* SPORTS: YANKEES 1, RED SOX 0: Mussina Misses Perfect Game by One Pitch (By BUSTER OLNEY, Sep. 3, 2001)
* SPORTS: Mickey Mantle's Relatives Can't Flee Tainted Dream (By RICHARD SANDOMIR, Sep. 3, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The First Celebration of Labor (NY TIMES, Sep. 3, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Moving Toward Online Sales Taxes (NY TIMES, Sep. 3, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: On the Way to Nowhere (By BOB HERBERT, Sep. 3, 2001)
OP-ED: What We Work for Now (By JEROME M. SEGAL, Sep. 3, 2001)
* OP-ED: Too Much Homework, Too Little Play [3 cents newsletter] (By KATHY SEAL, Sep. 3, 2001)
LETTERS: A Dollar, a Dream and That's All [State Lotteries] (By CHARLES GROPPER, M.D. et. al., Sep. 3, 2001)
LETTERS: A Welcoming Gesture [free water in restaurants] (By PETER HANAUER, Sep. 3, 2001)
BUSINESS: BellSouth's Down-Home Strategy (By SIMON ROMERO, Sep. 3, 2001)
Notions of New Economy Hinge on Pace of Productivity Growth (By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Sep. 3, 2001)
NEW ECONOMY: House to Focus on Net Access and Competition (By SETH SCHIESEL, Sep. 3, 2001)
Entrepreneur Is Quiet About His Past & Gets New Start in Net Surveillance (By MICHAEL BRICK, Sep. 3, 2001)
* E-COMMERCE REPORT: Bricks-and-Mortar Merchants Struggling to Assess Web Sidelines
(By BOB TEDESCHI, Sep. 3, 2001)
* Words From Our Sponsor: A Jeweler Commissions a Novel [Bulgari jewelry] (By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Sep. 3, 2001)
MEDIA TALK: Tabloids Cry: You Stole My Headline! (By FELICITY BARRINGER, Sep. 3, 2001)
MEDIA TALK: TV's 2 Hours at the O.K. Corral [Reality TV] (By BILL CARTER, Sep. 3, 2001)
MEDIA TALK: An Accusation of Online Plagiarism (By FELICITY BARRINGER, Sep. 3, 2001)
LETTERS: As for 'Bespoke,' the Readers Have Spoken (By BARBARA JOHNSON et. al., Sep. 3, 2001)
PATENTS: A Backpack That Cools and Refreshes (By SABRA CHARTRAND, Sep. 3, 2001)
* ARTS ONLINE: And the Best Internet Art Is... Virtually Anything (By MATTHE MIRAPAUL, Sep. 3, 2001)
BOOKS: 'WAR STORY': Reflections on the Holocaust and the Impossibility of Love
(By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, Sep. 3, 2001)
DANCE NOTES: Modern Field Out of Balance (By JENNIFER DUNNING, Sep. 3, 2001)
POP: HERBERT: Dance Music Meets Jazz, Splinters and All (By JON PARELES, Sep. 3, 2001)
TV CRITIC: TV Programs Show Public Education's Inspired but Rocky Road (By JULIE SALAMON, Sep. 3, 2001)
TV: ON TELEVISION: HBO Bets Pentagon-Style Budget on a World War II Saga (By BILL CARTER, Sep. 3, 2001)
THEATER: Quietly Nurturing the Writers and Performers of Tomorrow (By SHERRI DAY, Sep. 3, 2001)
HEALTH: NEWS ANALYSIS: New Stem Cell Issue as Congress Returns (By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, Sep. 3, 2001)

Sunday, September 2, 2001:
On This Day: Septmeber 2 (Ernst Curtius 9/2/1814-7/11/1896, Lucretia Hale 9/2/1820-6/12/1900, Giovanni Verga 9/2/1840-1/27/1922, A.G. Spalding 9/2/1850-9/9/1915, Wilhelm Ostwald 9/2/1853-4/4/1932, Frederick Soddy 9/2/1877-9/22/1956, Werner Blomberg 9/2/1878-3/22/1946, Cleveland Amory 9/2/1917-10/14/1998, Martha Mitchell 9/2/1918-5/31/1976, Horace Silver 1928, Alan K. Simpson 1931, Peter Ueberroth 1937, Sam Gooden 1939, Jimmy Clanton 1940, Terry Bradshaw 1948, Mark Harmon 1951, Jimmy Connors 1952, Linda Purl 1955, Keanu Reeves 1964)
Japan Surrenders To Allies On Warship; Truman Declares V-J Day (NY Times, Sept. 2, 1945)
Shuttle Explosion, Seven Who Perished in The Explosion of The Challenger
[Christa McAuliffe, 9/2/1948-1/28/1986] (NY Times, January 29, 1986)
* Dr. Peter Jusczyk, 53, Dies; Studied How Infants Learn (By CARLA BARANAUCKAS, Sep. 2, 2001)
Carmine Nigro, 91, Bobby Fischer's First Chess Teacher, Dies (By DYLAN LOEB McCLAIN, Sep. 2, 2001)
Stephen F. Keating, Former Honeywell President, Is Dead at 83 (NY TIMES, Sep. 2, 2001)
F. Perry Wilson, Former Union Carbide C.E.O., Dies at 86 (NY TIMES, Sep. 2, 2001)
* Rescuing a World-Famous but Fragile House [Wright's Bear Run] (By MATTHEW L. WALD, Sep. 2, 2001)
Gore Gets a Tepid Nod From Donors (By DON VAN NATTA Jr. & KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, Sep. 2, 2001)
SUNDAY Q & A: Figures on Homosexuality & President's Motorcade (NY TIMES, Sep. 2, 2001)
U.S. to Tell China It Will Not Object to Missile Buildup (By DAVID E. SANGER, Sep. 2, 2001)
U.S. Imposes Sanctions on Chinese Arms Maker (By JANE PERLEZ, Sep. 2, 2001)
Japanese Veteran Writes of Brutal Philippine War (By SETH MYDANS, Sep. 1, 2001)
NY REGION: FOLLOWING UP: A Jilted Bride (By JOSEPH P. FRIED, Sep. 2, 2001)
* Competition's Not Pretty in Lipstick Wars (By TERRY PRISTIN, Sep. 2, 2001)
* CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK: Putting a Pictorial Eye On Nature's Byways (By HOLLAND COTTER, Sep. 2, 2001)
* IN ART'S FOOTSTEPS: Patterns in Modern Life Reflect Hudson Aesthetic (By KIRK JOHNSON, Sep. 2, 2001)
* OP-ED: Cats at the Net (By MAUREEN DOWD, Sep. 2, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: Damaged by the Dow (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Sep. 2, 2001)
OP-ED: How Long Can Consumers Keep Spending? (By ROBERT B. REICH, Sep. 2, 2001)
OP-ED: Separate and Unequal on the West Bank (By AMIRA HASS, Sep. 2, 2001)
* LETTERS: Forests, Fires and Native Wisdom [Australian Aborigines] (By CHARLES P. REPKA et. al., Sep. 2, 2001)
* And There Was Light, and It Was Good? [skin color] (By SUSAN SAULNY, Sep. 2, 2001)
Racial Admissions The Path to Diversity? Different Differences (By DAVID J. GARROW, Sep. 2, 2001)
* Our Highways, Ourselves: Kerouac in a Car Pool (By PATRICIA LEIGH BROWN, Sep. 2, 2001)
Looking for a League of Their Own (By BILL GEIST, Sep. 2, 2001)
* Earning Their Letters Legally, the Alphabet Isn't as Simple as A, B and C
(By ADAM LIPTAK, Sep. 2, 2001)
Everybody's Neighbor (in Reruns) [Mr. Rogers' www.misterrogers.org] (By JIM RUTENBERG, Sep. 2, 2001)
Top Hat and One Weird Cat (By TOM KUNTZ, Sep. 2, 2001)
BUSINESS: As Cable Applies Pressure, Network TV Spouts Expletives (By JIM RUTENBERG, Sep. 2, 2001)
* Buy! Sell! Have a Beer! Dueling Wall Street Gurus (and Pals) (By DAVID LEONHARDT, Sep. 2, 2001)
MARKET WATCH: Take Away the Window Dressing, and Who Will Buy? (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Sep. 2, 2001)
* Nurturing Your Company's Inner Child: Let There Be Fun! (By HUBERT B. HERRING, Sep. 2, 2001)
* STRATEGIES: In Contrarians' Eyes, the Bears Have Room to Run (By MARK HULBERT, Sep. 2, 2001)
* From a Bull and a Bear, Conflicting Forecasts (By DAVID LEONHARDT, Sep. 2, 2001)
INVESTING WITH: John W. and John C. Thompson of the Thompson Plumb Growth Fund
(By CAROLE GOULD, Sep. 2, 2001)
* Excite@Home Executive in Crisis Control at Warp Speed (By MATT RICHTEL, Sep. 2, 2001)
Food Brokers Are Bigger, so Shelves Look Smaller (By KATE MURPHY, Sep. 2, 2001)
Amid Building Boom, Wariness on Stocks (By ELIZABETH KELLEHER, Sep. 2, 2001)
MARKET INSIGHT: Getting A Kick Out of the Euro (By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Sep. 2, 2001)
* FIVE QUESTIONS: Gateway Awaits the Next Bounce (By JENNIFER 8. LEE, Sep. 2, 2001)
* ON THE CONTRARY: In Technology, Supply Precedes Demand (By DANIEL AKST, Sep. 2, 2001)
* LOVE & MONEY: It's the Gratitude That Counts (By ELLYN SPRAGINS, Sep. 2, 2001)
* WORD FOR WORD: 'Just Say No to H20' (Unless It's Coke's Own Brew) (By DAVID F. GALLAGHER, Sep. 2, 2001)
INVESTING DIARY: Annual Reports, 2001: Scissors Not Required (By JEFF SOMMER, Sep. 2, 2001)
ART: In Sante Fe, Indian Art Goes Up and Down With the Market (By KEN SHULMAN, Sep. 2, 2001)
ART: Gary Simmons: The No-Tech Way Toward Art-Making (By FRANKLIN SIRMANS, Sep. 2, 2001)
ART: Telling the Story of America With Masterworks (By EDWARD M. GOMEZ, Sep. 2, 2001)
* MUSIC: Suddenly Seeing More in Rachmaninoff (By JAMES R. OESTREICH, Sep. 2, 2001)
MUSIC: Bob Dylan: Sometimes He Talks Crazy, Crazy Like a Song (By GREIL MARCUS, Sep. 2, 2001)
* OPERA: Zen and the Art of Opera [Walter Nowick] (By EVAN EISENBERG, Sep. 2, 2001)
POP: Aaliyah, a Pioneer, Briefly, of a New Sound (By KELEFA SANNEH, Sep. 2, 2001)
STYLE: All Undressed and So Many Places to Go (By GUY TREBAY, Sep. 2, 2001)
STYLE: AGE OF DISSONANCE: A Swan Song of Summer (By BOB MORRIS, Sep. 2, 2001)
STYLE: COUNTERINTELLIGENCE: The Not-So-Buried Child (By ALEX WITCHEL, Sep. 2, 2001)
STYLE: Meet Me at the Boutique (You Can Dust While You Wait) (By HEIDI SHERMAN, Sep. 2, 2001)
STYLE: NOTICED (By DAVID COLMAN, Sep. 2, 2001)
VOWS: Robin van Orman and Norberto Azqueta (By LOIS SMITH BRADY, Sep. 2, 2001)
A NIGHT OUT WITH: Frank and Mike DeMaio: Diamonds in the Rough (By LINDA LEE, Sep. 2, 2001)
ON THE STREET: Of Gee Up and Get-Up (Photographs by BILL CUNNINGHAM, Sep. 2, 2001)
SUNDAY NY TIMES MAGAZINE (NY TIMES, Sep. 2, 2001)
* ON LANGUAGE: Forget the Adjectives. Just Trademark Your Prose (By ALEX FRANKEL, Sep. 2, 2001)
* Questions for Elizabeth Mackay (By AMY BARRETT, Sep. 2, 2001)
Unhappy With Your Past? Make it Up! (By JOHN LELAND, Sep. 2, 2001)
GALLERY: For Female Tennis Pros It's Every Woman for Herself
(Photograph by LAUREN GREENFIELD, Text by SELENA ROBERTS, Sep. 2, 2001)
THE ETHICIST: Kiddie Scam (By RANDY COHEN, Sep. 2, 2001)
The Blue Mood of a White-Hot Nathan Lane (By ALEX WITCHEL, Sep. 2, 2001)
* What Beijing Can Learn From Moscow (By IAN BURUMA, Sep. 2, 2001)
Handcuffed by History [race riot in York, PA, July 1969] (By WILLIAM BUNCH, Sep. 2, 2001)
Jonathan Franzen's Big Book (By EMILY EAKIN, Sep. 2, 2001)
STYLE: One Man's Appraisal of 'Low-Life Modern' (By T. H. ROBSJOHN-GIBBINGS, Sep. 2, 2001)
STYLE: A New Collection Takes Root on Fashion Avenue (By AMY M. SPINDLER, Sep. 2, 2001)
STYLE: Mouthing Off (By MARY TANNEN, Sep. 2, 2001)
STYLE: Fashion and Furniture Feel the Gravitational Pull
(Photos by ANDREAS BLECKMANN, Styled by MIMI LOMBARDO, Text by STEVE GARBARINO, Sep. 2, 2001)
FOOD DIARY: The Regal Gourmet (By AMANDA HESSER, Sep. 2, 2001)
LIVES: For An F.B.I. Agent, Broken Promises Are Part of the Mission (By CHRISTOPHER WHITCOMB, Sep. 2, 2001)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents (NY TIMES, Sep. 2, 2001)
* George Steiner, 'Grammars of Creation': Is the Future Just a Tense? (By ROGER KIMBALL, Sep. 2, 2001)
SCIENCE FICTION: Monuments From the Future (By GERALD JONAS, Sep. 2, 2001)
POETRY: Richard Haas, 'The City Is My Canvas' (By M. CAMERON ARNOLD, Sep. 2, 2001)
* ON WRITERS AND WRITING: A Hair-Metal Fans' Notes (By DWIGHT GARNER, Sep. 2, 2001)
* SCIENCE: A Meteor's Remnants Draw a Posse (By, Sep. 2, 2001)

Saturday, September 1, 2001:
On This Day: Septmeber 1 (Giacomo Torelli 9/1/1608-6/17/1678, Engelbert Humperdinck 9/1/1854-9/27/1921, James Corbett 9/1/1866-2/18/1933, Edgar Burroughs 9/1/1875-3/19/1950, Francis Aston 9/1/1877-11/20/1945, Marilyn Miller 9/1/1898-4/7/1936, Carlo Gambino 9/1/1902-10/15/1976, Dame Peggy van Praagh 9/1/1910-1/15/1990, Rocky Marciano 9/1/1923-8/31/1969, Melvin R. Laird 1922, Yvonne DeCarlo 1922, Ann Richards 1933, Seiji Ozawa 1935, Ron O'Neal 1937, Don Stroud 1943, Archie Bell 1944, Barry Gibb 1946, Gloria Estefan 1957, Dee Dee Myers 1961)
German Army Attacks Poland; Danzig Is Accepted Into Reich (NY Times, Sept. 1, 1939)
Reuther Dies in Jet Crash With Wife and 4 Others [9/1/1907-5/9/1970] (NY Times, May 11, 1970)

Ethel Scull, a Patron of Pop and Minimal Art, Dies at 79 (By GRACE GLUECK, Sep. 1, 2001)
Carl Brewer, Battled N.H.L. for Pensions, Dies at 62 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 1, 2001)
Josef Fried, 87, Organic Chemist Noted for Tailored Compounds, Is Dead (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Sep. 1, 2001)
Stephen Gorove, 83, Leader in Field of Space Law, Dies (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Sep. 1, 2001)

Edward Rivera, Writer and Teacher, Dies at 62 (NY TIMES, Sep. 1, 2001)
Dick Selma, Baseball Player, Dies at 57 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 1, 2001)
Lawrence B. Marcus, Screenwriter, Dies at 84 (NY TIMES, Sep. 1, 2001)
44 Die in Tokyo as Fire Sweeps Gambling Club (By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Sep. 1, 2001)
Report Shows Americans Have More 'Labor Days' (By STEVEN GREENHOUSE, Sep. 1, 2001)
New Zealand and Nauru to Take 460 Refugees at Sea (By REUTERS, Sep. 1, 2001)
NY REGION: Private Mass, Public Tribute for Singer Aaliyah (By JOYCE WADLER, Sep. 1, 2001)
Canada Warms to Wal-Mart (By BERNARD SIMON, Sep. 1, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Over-Age Pitcher [14-year old Danny Almonte] (NY TIMES, Sep. 1, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Ponytailed Place-Kicker (NY TIMES, Sep. 1, 2001)
OP-ED: JOURNAL: Big Boys Should Cry (By FRANK RICH, Sep. 1, 2001)
OP-ED: How Patients' Rights Became a Fight (By MARION BERRY, Sep. 1, 2001)
OP-ED: A Down-to-Earth Solution to Airport Gridlock (By MICHAEL S. DUKAKIS, Sep. 1, 2001)
LETTERS: Yale's China Ties (By MICHAEL HOLQUIST, Sep. 1, 2001)
BUSINESS: Slight Gains Don't Lift Market Spirits Much
[Dow +30, Nasdaq +14] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Sep. 1, 2001)
Japan's Electronics Slump Takes a Toll on Southeast Asia (By WAYNE ARNOLD, Sep. 1, 2001)
ARTS: New Accusations of a Vatican Role in Anti-Semitism (By EMILY EAKIN, Sep. 1, 2001)
* ART CRITIC: Memories Live in Ansel Adams Dreamscapes (By SARAH BOXER, Sep. 1, 2001)
MUSIC: 'MUSICAL OBSERVATIONS 2001': The Other Schnabel, Reticent Composer (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Sep. 1, 2001)

| Top of Page | Oct.2001 | Aug.2001 | July.2001 | June.2001 | May.2001 | Apr.2001 | Mar.2001 | Feb.2001 | Jan.2001 |
| Dec.2000 | Nov.2000 | Oct.2000 | Sept.2000 | Aug.2000 | July.2000 | June.2000 | May.2000 |
| NYTimes-2000 | NYTimes Archive | Dates | A-Z Portals | News | References | Home |

© Peter Y. Chou, WisdomPortal.com
P.O. Box 390707, Mountain View, CA 94039
email: peter@wisdomportal.com