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The steady stream of anti-Europe invective from President George W. Bush and others in the White House has continued apace.
Despite decades of harmful regulation, and countless puzzling court decisions, neithertelecommunications and local telecommunications technologies nor the related markets are about to disappear.
In May 1997, world leaders, academics, journalists, and government officials explored subjects vital to the future security and prosperity of democratic nations on both sides of the Atlantic.
Whether Americans support Arizona's new immigration law, they blame the federal government for failure to act.
A personal history of Poland, told through the community experience of restoring a house in a village plagued by invasion and disaster.
Representatives of the nations of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization will convene in Madrid this month to decide which new countries to accept into the alliance.
Some thoughts about how Atlantic institutions can be strengthened to meet new security needs before the NATO summit of July 1997.
Once little more than a blip on the radar of American higher education, for-profit colleges now enroll about 1 in 10 of the nation’s postsecondary students. And this fast growth has not gone unremarked. The past year has brought unprecedented scrutiny and often harsh criticism of proprietary education from policy makers, regulators, and the news media.






