Articles

Artists Strike a Chord Artists Strike a Chord

Johnny Temple plays bass guitar in the rock bands Girls Against Boys and New Wet Kojak and is the publisher of Akashic Books (www.akashicbooks.com).

Feb 27, 2002 / Books & the Arts / Johnny Temple

A Prayer for America A Prayer for America

I offer these brief remarks today as a prayer for our country, with love of democracy, as a celebration of our country. With love for our country. With hope for our country.

Feb 26, 2002 / Books & the Arts / Dennis Kucinich

What’s God Got to Do With It? What’s God Got to Do With It?

God again!

Feb 26, 2002 / Column / Robert Scheer

Patriotic Dissent Patriotic Dissent

It just got a little harder to ignore the dissenters in America's War on Terrorism.

Feb 24, 2002 / Feature / Jordan Moss

Interview with Senator Jon Corzine Interview with Senator Jon Corzine

Corzine: You set the right context.

Feb 21, 2002 / Feature / William Greider

A Stealth Attack on Freedom of the Press A Stealth Attack on Freedom of the Press

The Federal Communications Commission is presently conducting an inquiry--a "rulemaking"--to determine whether to relax, or even to eliminate, the remaining few regulations that ...

Feb 21, 2002 / Feature / Robert W. McChesney and Mark Crispin Miller

Unhappy Anniversary Unhappy Anniversary

The McLaughlin Group is about to "celebrate" its twentieth anniversary. We might as well "celebrate" the discovery of anthrax. The show flatters itself--and its corporate ...

Feb 21, 2002 / Column / Eric Alterman

Letters Letters

BRIDEFARE OF FRANKENSTEIN Minneapolis Katha Pollitt ["$hotgun Weddings," Feb. 4] makes many very excellent points about the horrors of "bridefare," but she...

Feb 21, 2002 / Our Readers

Better Safe…? Better Safe…?

In my last column, I called the expansion of profiling that has occurred since September 11 "equal opportunity." I meant it ironically, but a surprising number of people took me ...

Feb 21, 2002 / Column / Patricia J. Williams

In Cold Type In Cold Type

Some magazines have an identity problem, and some don't. The New York Review of Books doesn't, as you may have noticed. It's relentlessly highbrow, which is how we like it. For t...

Feb 21, 2002 / Books & the Arts / Amy Wilentz

x