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1969 / February | View All Issues |

February 1969

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Letters

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The easy chair

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What you can do to improve TV

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After hours

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Atlanta’s culture for all seasons

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Poetry

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Cemetery

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Litchfield County

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God, country, and Billy Graham

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The New York Times, part II

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Punch Sulzberger and the 1960′s

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Stonewall Jackson’s waterloo

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Trash, art, and the movies

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Theft of the nation

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The guilty optimists

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No time for heroes

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America: three foreign comments

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A time for choice

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[Editor's Note]
Why the AR-15 rifle is here to stay,
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“Even if federal gun-control advocates got everything they wanted, they couldn’t prevent America’s most popular rifle from being made, sold, and used. Understanding why this is true requires an examination of how the firearm is made.”
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“During the early 1990s, farmers throughout the Great Plains began to notice a decline in their wells. Irrigation systems from the Dakotas to Texas dipped, and, in some places, have been abandoned entirely.”
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Amount British Nuclear Fuels paid the British Scouts last year to add its logo to their scientist badge:

$49,776

Roughly 80 percent of U.S. cocaine was thought to be contaminated with a drug that causes skin tissues to rot.

Ohio was judged to be the most profane state.

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