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May 24, 2013: [Woolwich][Limiting drones][Syria embargo][Boy Scouts vote]
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Statesmen

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Review — From the February 2003 issue

Minting Franklin

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More lives of the quintessential American

By Matthew Mills Stevenson

Review — From the August 2000 issue

Don’t judge his heart

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Is our notion of the founding fathers’ “characters” relevant material for history?

By James S. Bowman

Readings — From the July 1986 issue

Waltzing with Molotov

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By Teresa Toraânska, Jakub Berman, Agnieszka Kolakowska (Translator)

Article — From the January 1986 issue

Untitled

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By Lewis H. Lapham, , , William F. (William Frank) Buckley, , Mark Crispin Miller, Robert Darnton

Readings — From the August 1985 issue

Character studies

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By Julius Bengtsson

Books — From the July 1983 issue

Lives of the saints

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All celibate, vegetarian, utopian pacifists are not alike–cf., Tolstoy and Gandhi

By Marvin Mudrick

illustration — From the July 1983 issue

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By David Suter (Artist/illustrator), (Artist/illustrator), Jean-Claude Suarès (Artist/illustrator), William Bramhall (Artist/illustrator)

Books — From the January 1982 issue

Sixteenth-century Nixon tapes

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Overheard history

By Richard Holmes

Article — From the October 1979 issue

The Survivors Club

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Rules and regulations

By Matthew Mills Stevenson

illustration — From the November 1978 issue

The pond revisited

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By Aaron Shikler (Artist/illustrator), Graham Vivian Sutherland (Artist/illustrator)

Commentary — From the September 1975 issue

On the character of politicians

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By Walter Bagehot

Wraparound — From the July 1975 issue

Statesman on horseback

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By Helmut Sonnenfeldt

Wraparound — From the October 1973 issue

High-mindedness

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By Timothy Dickinson

The new books — From the May 1965 issue

A trinity of nation-builders

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By Edward R.F. Sheehan

Article — From the July 1958 issue

School for statesmen

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By Joseph Kraft

Personal and otherwise — From the March 1958 issue

Among our contributors

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Guide for statesmen

Article — From the September 1952 issue

De Gasperi

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Statesman of the dark hours

By George E. Jones

Article — From the June 1951 issue

Citizen and soldier

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By Archibald Percival Wavell, Earl of Wavell

Article — From the September 1931 issue

Wellington

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The last phase

By Philip Guedalla

Article — From the August 1931 issue

Wellington at Paris

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By Philip Guedalla

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How to Make Your Own AR-15

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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,
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[Perspective]
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?”
Illustration by Jeremy Traum
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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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[Harper's Finest]
Gary Greenberg’s “Manufacturing Depression” (2007)

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Wherein the author enrolls in a clinical drug trial
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“This is the heart of the magic factory, the place where medicine is infused with the miracles of science.”
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Broken Heartland

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By Wil S. Hylton
“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.”
Illustration (detail) by Jeffery Smith

Amount British Nuclear Fuels paid the British Scouts last year to add its logo to their scientist badge:

$49,776

AUGUST 1998 > SEARCH >

British Nuclear Fuels (Warrington, U.K.)

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

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Ohio was judged to be the most profane state.

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Article — From the May 2007 issue

Manufacturing Depression

By Gary Greenberg

“This is the heart of the magic factory, the place where medicine is infused with the miracles of science, and I’ve come to see how it’s done.”

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