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Salon.com November 8, 2001 Douglas Cruickshank |
Why do you think they called them "best boys"? A new book names names and tells tales as it charts the lasting influence of gays and lesbians on the movie business....  |
Mother Jones Sep/Oct 2001 |
Media Jones Fateful Harvest by Duff Wilson uncovers 'fertilizer' as industrial waste... Nadine Gordimer's The Pickup explores the meeting of those with choices and those without... Richard Neer has a sad story to tell in FM: The Rise and Fall of Rock Radio... Music choices...  |
Salon.com November 7, 2001 Marc Rotenberg |
Internet liberation theology In "The Future of Ideas" Lawrence Lessig explains why ham-handed efforts to increase copyright protection are a threat to freedom and prosperity...  |
| Knowledge@Wharton |
Life According to Jack "Whirlwind" is defined as, among other things, "a tumultuous rush." That definition aptly describes life with Jack Welch as depicted in his heavily hyped autobiography, Jack: Straight from the Gut...  |
Salon.com November 6, 2001 Tracy Mayor |
Kiss Harry Potter goodbye The handful of days left before the movie comes out are our last chance to remember J.K. Rowling's young wizard as we imagined him...  |
Reason November 2001 Rhys Southan |
Free Radical Journalist Christopher Hitchens explains why he's no longer a socialist, why moral authoritarianism is on the rise, and what's wrong with anti-globalization protestors...  |
Reason November 2001 Brian Doherty |
The Free-Floating Bob Dylan What makes Dylan worth thinking about is that he has been -- and remains -- unprecedentedly great at what he does: writing songs and performing them. Two recent books try to get a handle on Dylan...  |
Reason November 2001 Gary Alan Fine |
Chewing the Fat The misguided beef against fast food...  |
Reason November 2001 Alan Charles Kors |
Sex, Drugs, Jews, and Rock 'n' Roll Kenneth J. Heineman's Put Your Bodies Upon the Wheels: Student Revolt in the 1960s is a shameless history...  |
CIO November 1, 2001 Malcolm Wheatley |
Distance's Demise According to British author Frances Cairncross, the world has yet to wake up to the implications of what she describes as "The Death of Distance," the still-unfolding possibilities unlocked by the power, reach and changing economics of global telecommunications...  |
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