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Showing results for: iran (page 335)

Home is where the revolution is

Cecelie S. Berry
When they forsake the revolution to raise children at home, smart women fear they've made a stupid choice.

Writers We Love: Pico Iyer

Don George
This world-wanderer masterfully tracks the intricacies of the dance of East and West.

It's about character, stupid

Fred Branfman
Why the public needs to know whether, when and why George W. Bush used drugs.

“It's about how much craziness you have to accept”

Michael Sragow
Director Paul Mazursky on Warren Beatty's relentless charm, Woody Allen's inferiority complex and Peter Sellers' maddening talent.

Living infomercial

Mary Roach
Our intrepid reporter checks out cannulas and after-surgery underwear, and sees a banana tattooed!

Total eclipse

Jeff Greenwald
Encountering Iran on the cusp of change.

Rendezvous of the sun and the moon

Jeff Greenwald
Our eclipse correspondent witnesses ancient treasures and a modern miracle in Iran.

Letters to the Editor

Letters to the Editor
An outpouring of fond farewells for Anne Lamott; readers weigh merits of "Monsters of Grace"; questioning the Kennedy legacy (and others).

I'm going to Disney World

Donald D. Groff
Our expert advises readers on the best Disney packages, the cheapest Tokyo-London flights and finding that authentic tamale south of the border.

Disturbing encounters in Iran

Mark Mordue
Did that gesture mean he wanted to slit my throat? Or that Iran was slitting its own?

Rebirth of a nation

Daryl Lindsey
Iran's burgeoning democracy movement against the power of the fundamentalist establishment is led by students in blue jeans who like American music.

Short attention span theater

John Geirland
Is the Web the perfect place for short films? Cheaper and easier than a trip to the cinema, it may spawn a rebirth of the 10-minute talkie.

The war over KPFA

Anthony York
Stupid management tricks at a Berkeley public radio station make people care about free speech there -- even if they don't listen to it anymore.

Young heroes in an ancient land

Carol Lloyd
Iranian student protesters differ from American ones in two ways: They're risking their lives, and their nation trusts them.

Generation R.I.P.

Jenn Shreve
The Village Voice pronounces Generation X as dead as Kurt Cobain and as irrelevant as a Cheesy Poof. Plus: Alternative health stories that don't suck.

FilmAid

Peter Landesman
When some Hollywood producers tried to bring the cinema -- and a few celebrities -- to an Albanian refugee camp, they found their audience, though appreciative, had more pressing dramas to deal with.

Letters to the editor

Letters to the Editor
Competing for the perfect man; Cisneros, an imperfect man.

Blue Glow

Joyce Millman
Salon's TV picks for
Monday, June 28, 1999

Henry Cisneros and the Starr syndrome

Guy Raz
Taped conversations, a lawsuit by a woman named Jones and a zealous independent counsel. Sound familiar? But the former HUD secretary faces not impeachment, but 90 years in prison.

More best books of the century

Don George
Readers recommend their favorite works of travel fiction and nonfiction.

The Manchurian presidency

David Horowitz
The worst national security disaster in history came about because President Clinton had loyalties not to foreign communists, but to the Chinese funders who got him elected.

Clinton's stealth China policy

Christopher Hitchens
The president would rather look like a bumbler than own up to a policy that ignores China's wrongdoing, from campaign finance to nuclear espionage.

Inside the Starr chamber

Jack Hitt
Bob Woodward's new book shows the independent counsel as the pervert-run-amok we all knew he was.

How many sites would Australia's Net censorship scheme kill?

Paul Gardiner
Aimed at porn, the bill would push service providers to block anything even remotely risqu
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