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May 21, 2013: [Witch hunt][Bangladesh tariffs][Military sex abuse][Rob Ford]
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Guatemala

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Weekly Review — August 26, 2008, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Paul Ford

Barack Obama announced Joe Biden, the senior senator from Delaware, as his running mate, even though Biden voted for the war in Iraq and for NAFTA and once said that Obama was “the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy.”Information WeekThe Washington PostThe Obama campaign denied that there was anything wrong with Biden’s signing a 2005 bill that eliminated many bankruptcy protections for consumers after Biden’s lobbyist son Hunter was retained for $100,000 a year by the financial-services giant MBNA, employees of which have donated $214,000 to Biden over the years.The New York …

Article — From the December 2007 issue

The atrocity files

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Deciphering the archives of Guatemala’s dirty war

By Kate Doyle

Weekly Review — February 27, 2007, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Claire Gutierrez

An American cattleman. An appeals court in Washington, D.C., ruled that the writ of habeas corpus does not apply to prisoners in the American concentration camp at Guantánamo Bay,Cuba.Washington PostAmericans celebrated the 275th birthday of George Washington, and President George W. Bush compared the War on Terror to the American Revolution: “General Washington understood that the Revolutionary War was a test of wills, and his will was unbreakable.”Washington PostBritish Prime Minister Tony Blair announced that he would bring home more than 1,600 of the 7,100 British troops in Iraq. Vice President Dick Cheney said that the withdrawal was “an affirmation …

Weekly Review — October 3, 2006, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Miriam Markowitz

A Christian martyr. The United States Army extended combat tours for 4,000 soldiers in Iraq,.AP via Yahoo! Newsand the Bush Administration declassified an intelligence report that called the war a “cause celebre” for Muslim extremists.AP via Yahoo! NewsThe new leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq claimed that 4,000 foreign insurgents have died since the 2003 invasion.AP via Yahoo! NewsSenator Trent Lott of Mississippi told reporters that it’s hard for Americans to understand “what’s wrong” with Iraqis. “Why do they hate the Israelis and despise their right to exist? Why do they hate each other? Why do Sunnis kill Shiites? How …

Weekly Review — October 11, 2005, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Paul Ford

Lost Souls in Hell, 1875. At least 42,000 people died in an earthquake in Pakistan,ABC Newsand hundreds of people in Mexico, Guatemala, and El Salvador were buried alive in mudslides caused by Hurricane Stan.Science DailyBritain accused the Iranian Revolutionary Guard of providing Iraqi Shiite groups with the technology to carry out bombing attacks.BBC NewsA suicide bomber in Iraq blew himself up on a bus, killing ten people,BBC Newsand the Supreme Court of Israel ordered the Israeli Army to stop using Palestinians as human shields.BBC NewsThe CIA announced that it would not punish any of its employees for intelligence failures leading …

Weekly Review — August 5, 2003, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Bill Wasik

President George W. Bush refused to declassify the twenty-eight pages of Congress’s September 11 report that pertained to Saudi Arabia, despite calls to do so by members of Congress and by the Saudi government itself, which said it intended to rebut the contents.New York TimesAccording to those who have read it, the redacted section lays out far more financial connections between the September 11 hijackers, fifteen of whom were Saudi, and the Saudi government than had been previously revealed.The most specific allegations concerned Omar al-Bayoumi, a Saudi man who had provided funds and assistance to two of the hijackers in …

Weekly Review — June 12, 2001, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Roger D. Hodge

The United States Commission on Civil Rights released its report on the Floridaelection, concluding that blacks were widely disenfranchised by the actions of state officials and calling for an investigation by the Justice Department. After the National Academy of Sciences, in a report requested by President Bush, confirmed that global warming is in fact real, the White House was forced to disappoint its stockholders in the petroleum industry and acknowledge that climate change is an “issue that nations do need to deal withâ??all nations, industrialized nations, the United States, developing nations, as well.” President Bush went off to Europe, where …

Weekly Review — August 15, 2000, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Roger D. Hodge

A National Academy of Sciences report found that most U.S. nuclear bomb-making facilities, including the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, will be contaminated “in perpetuity.” Defense Secretary William S. Cohen delayed making his recommendation to President Clinton concerning the wisdom of building a national missile defense program. The contents of a top secret report on the likely consequences of the anti-missile program were leaked to the news media, confirming numerous public statements by Chinese and Russian government officials that they would deploy more missiles. A standoff between workers and government agents continued at one of Russia’s premier vodka factories; President Vladimir Putin …

Article — From the June 1999 issue

Death squad diary

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Looking into the secret archives of Guatemala’s bureaucracy of murder

By Kate Doyle

Article — From the August 1995 issue

Flacking for despots

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A Washington lobbyist agrees to buff the image of another repressive regime

By Ken Silverstein

Notebook — From the February 1989 issue

Quetzal

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By Lewis H. Lapham

Readings — From the April 1988 issue

Army float, Independence Day, Nebaj, Quiché

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By Jean-Marie Simon (Photographer)

Readings — From the November 1986 issue

No! to the civil patrol

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By Jean-Marie Simon

Article — From the January 1986 issue

Guatemalan death masque

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Pomp and terror in a dark country

By Francisco Goldman

Readings — From the January 1986 issue

Refugee landscape

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By Janet Spritzler Levin (N/A)

Readings — From the August 1985 issue

Guatemala

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The price of protest

By MarĂ­a del Rosario Godoy de Cuevas

Article — From the September 1984 issue

Guatemala, 1954

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The overthrow of Arbenz

By David Atlee Phillips

Article — From the August 1981 issue

Farewell, Monroe doctrine

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Three dates of change in Latin America

By Carlos Fuentes

Article — From the July 1955 issue

Guatemala

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What the Reds left behind

By Keith Monroe

Article — From the August 1943 issue

Quinine–reborn in our hemisphere

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By Charles Morrow Wilson

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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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In the aftermath of the Boston Marathon bombing, why did so few people protest the decision to lock down parts of the city?
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Class A: Baseball in the Middle of Everywhere

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Lucas Mann on hope and change in a minor-league-baseball city
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“This one constant in the face of job loss, population loss — all of this erratic change — infused the stands with a sense of continual possibility.”

Minimum number of baboons forced to smoke crack in a 1989 study testing the efficacy of cigarettes as a drug delivery device:

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A Missouri cinema apologized for hiring an actor dressed in body armor and carrying a fake rifle to appear at a screening of Iron Man 3.

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