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May 20, 2013: [Witch hunt][Bangladesh tariffs][Military sex abuse][Rob Ford]
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South Dakota

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Article — From the December 2009 issue

Ghosts of Wounded Knee

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By Matthew Power

Readings — From the November 2009 issue

526 7th St., Rapid City, South Dakota

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By Jon Rafman (Compiler)

Weekly Review — June 6, 2006, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Rafil Kroll-Zaidi

In Iraq, a car bomb in Basra killed at least 33 people, CNNa mortar attack in southern Baghdad killed 9 people,Yahoo! Newsand 8 U.S. soldiers died.icasualties.orgPolice found 22 bodies with bullet wounds and signs of torture in Baghdad;Reutersnorthwest of the city, at an improvised checkpoint, 19 civilians were dragged from their cars and shot.Kuwait News AgencyTwenty-one Kurds and Shiites, many of them high school students, were ordered off a bus and executed in Ain Laila.Belleville News DemocratIn Baquba 7 policemen were killed,BBCand the heads of 8 Sunni men were found in Dole banana boxes.Indian ExpressReutersSix more policemen were killed in …

Weekly Review — March 28, 2006, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Paul Ford

Thirty beheaded corpses were found in Baquba, Iraq, and 10 more bodies were found in Baghdad, where the homicide rate had reached 33 per day. Shiites were abducting Sunnis in bright daylight on crowded streets. “If the Americans leave,” said one Sunni man (whose brother had recently been executed after being tortured with power tools), “we are finished. We may be finished already.”The New York TimesThe New York TimesIn Miqdadiya, near Baquba, militants attacked a prison, killed 20 people, and freed 30 prisoners.BBC NewsA doctor in Baghdad admitted to killing 35 policemen and soldiers who were being treated at his …

Weekly Review — February 28, 2006, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Paul Ford

Caricature of Louis IV, by Thackeray. 1875. At least 140 people were killed in Iraq during fighting that broke out after the Al Askari mosque, a Shiiteshrine in Samarra, was bombed. Sunni leaders said that 184 mosques had been attacked in the fighting, and a daytime curfew was in effect in Baghdad. “If there is a civil war in this country,” said Iraqi Defense Minister Saadoun al-Dulaimi, “it will never end.”Democracy Now!ReutersIn Saudi Arabia, Al Qaeda attempted to bomb the Abqaiq oil facility but was thwarted. Two guards died in the attack.BBC NewsNineMSNPresident George W. Bush threatened to veto any …

Weekly Review — August 23, 2005, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Paul Ford

Runaway Raft on the Tigris. Peter Schoomaker, the Army’s top general, revealed that the United States was developing a plan to keep at least 100,000 soldiers in Iraq through 2009. Senator Chuck Hagel (R., Nebr.) called the plan “complete folly.” “It would further destabilize the Middle East,” he said. “It would give Iran more influence, it would hurt Israel, it would put our allies over there in Saudi Arabia and Jordan in a terrible position.”APAPPresident George W. Bush had yet to meet Iraq war protester Cindy Sheehan, even though Bush is on vacation and presumably has the time. “I think …

Weekly Review — June 7, 2005, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Paul Ford

President George W. Bush said that allegations made by Amnesty International, claiming that the prison at Guantánamo Bay is a “gulag,” were absurd. Bush accused Amnesty of listening to “people that have been trained in some instances to disassemble–that means not tell the truth.” Whitehouse.govU.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan said that HIV and AIDS were spreading at an accelerating rate around the world,ReutersNew Jersey was planning to try six animal-rights activists on “animal enterprise terrorism” charges,Reutersand an Australian woman was arrested for attempting to bring fifty-one tropical fish into the country hidden in her skirt.APSeveral prisoners at Guantánamo Bay said …

Readings — From the January 1992 issue

The art of the political draft

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Readings — From the April 1988 issue

Haystack beefcake

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Wraparound — From the July 1974 issue

Readers

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By Carole Oligario, ,

Article — From the June 1974 issue

The continuing massacre at Wounded Knee

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By Terri Schultz

Article — From the February 1974 issue

U.S. loses Rhode Island; “deaccession” disclosed

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By George W.S. Trow

Article — From the June 1973 issue

Bamboozle me not at Wounded Knee

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By Terri Schultz

Countersigns — From the June 1973 issue

A weakness in the market for polemic

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Article — From the December 1958 issue

South Dakota’s Christian martyrs

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By Richard S. Jr. Meryman

Personal and otherwise — From the November 1953 issue

Textbook in a shack

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Editor's drawer — From the August 1917 issue

Logic

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Editor's drawer — From the January 1912 issue

Taking no chances

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The drawer — From the October 1899 issue

Justice

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Article — From the January 1898 issue

The new Northwest

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By Joseph Albert Wheelock

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[Editor's Note]
Introducing the June Issue of Harper’s Magazine
Why the AR-15 rifle is here to stay,
the conspiracy theories of Room 237,
and more
By Ellen Rosenbush

Lucas Mann on hope and change in a minor-league-baseball city

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On Gun Control and Collective Rights
The firearm as emblem of personal sovereignty
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“Let’s review our recent national paroxysm about guns, shall we?”
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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.”
Illustration by Jeremy Traum
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In Boston, An Exercise in Intimidation

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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 reduction in distrust toward atheists was documented among pious Canadians who are reminded of the Vancouver police.

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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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Portfolio — From the September 2012 issue

The Water of My Land

By Samuel James (Photographer)

Winner of the 2012 Olivier Rebbot Award for best photographic reporting from abroad in magazines or books

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