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In this issue
Edition: U.S.
Vol. 162 No. 24

NOTEBOOK
10 Questions for Oprah Winfrey

Rushing To Judgment (Essay)
What do conservatives like Rush Limbaugh hate more than drugs? Ambiguity

15 Years Ago In Time (Notebook/Milestones)

A Softer Approach?
The Attorney General scales back its prosecution of suspected terrorists

Milestones (Notebook/Milestones)

Ariel Sharon's Pilot Problem
Some members of the Israeli Air Force challenge a policy of firing in civillan areas

Big Fat Greek Problems
Less conventional issues are facing the Athens Olympic planners

Numbers

Performance Of The Week

Should Hospitals Snitch?
A California congressman pushes for reporting of illegal aliens receiving medical care

Thrill Rides: Headed for a Slowdown?

Verbatim

Letters (Letters)

Q & A With Hugh Hefner (People)

PEOPLE (People/First Look)


CONNECTIONS
Recipe For Young Chefs
Start with a family that savors good food, add patience, practice, sprinkle with fun and voila!

Be My Guest
Two experts tell how to be the kind of holiday visitor who gets invited back

Not So Lonely Planet
Call it destination bonding or traveling in a pack. The hot way to vacation is with a bunch of friends

Marathon for a Reader
Editor and critic Sara Nelson decided to read almost round the clock for a year. Here's what she learned


GLOBAL BUSINESS
To Your Health
From a nonpolluting fertilizer to help for millions of blind people, this year's Tech Pioneers are molding man and machine for the well-being of your body — and the world

More Power To You
Alternative-energy technologies could soon give your phone, your car and your house their own micro-generators

Utah's Sparkle
The Olympics are gone, but not the venues. It's your turn at the bobsled

Locked Up
A former TSA consultant created standards for locks that could be easily opened for inspection and then closed

Land of the Rising Stocks
Japan's equity market has stopped inflicting pain. Is it now ripe for a significant gain?

Hollywood's IPO
Here's the IPO pitch: invest in a company with no sales, an operating loss since inception and an idea for a product

From Cola to Cable
The men who give Coca-Cola a run for its money in Romania are expanding into the hotly competitive cable-television business

Everyone into the Bonus Pool
Stock-option grants and performance-based bonuses are spreading globally

Digital, P.I.
They can pick you out in a crowd, track what you buy — and maybe save your life

Vespa Goes Vrroom
U.S. sales of Vespa have grown at double-digit rates since Piaggio reintroduced it Stateside in 2000

Search inside this issue:

NATION
Driving in the Line of Fire
A series of shootings puts Ohio residents on edge

The Case He Left Behind
The brutal murder of prosecutor Jonathan Luna is as puzzling as any he pursued in his too-brief career


SPECIAL REPORT
If Life Is Good, Why Do the Old Days Look Better?
Author Gregg Eaterbrook offers intriguing theories about the contradictions of modern life in a new book, The Progress Paradox: How Life Gets Better While People Feel Worse (Random House; 355 pages. An exclusive excerpt


NATION
Operation February (Campaign '04)
Confident about winning Iowa and New Hampshire next month, Howard Dean is already setting his sights on the rest of the nation

The Little Spark In Clark (In The Arena)


WORLD
A Different Road Map
A new, unofficial Middle East peace plan unveiled in Geneva is drawing praise and derision. Here's what the fuss is about


BUSINESS
Eisner's Wild, Wild Ride
Disney's CEO is a survivor, but now he's under attack from an heir to the kingdom. A look at the battle ahead

How Boeing Got Lost
America's biggest exporter is mired in scandal and beset by Airbus. Can its new chief find the way?


SCIENCE
China's Secret Plague (Science/Time In Depth)
How one U.S. scientist is struggling to help the government face up to an exploding AIDS crisis


SOCIETY
Does Kindergarten Need Cops?
The youngest schoolkids are acting out in really outrageous ways. Why?


THE ARTS
Designing Women (Arts/Art)
John Currin is the big painter of the moment. His retrospective makes you ask, Does size matter?

Seven Holiday Treats (Arts/Movies)
Well, some are precious gifts; some are lumps of coal. A couple are epic in scope; others are microscopic. A few have their eyes on the Oscar prize; the rest will be happy to entertain you and siphon off your shopping budget between now and the New Year

The Industry Standards (Arts/Music)
Covering the old songs is a surefire way for performers to buff up their image. Or is it?


YOUR TIME
An Easier Colon Test (Your Time/Health)
A virtual colonoscopy is now as good as the real thing. Is it right for you?

If You Want A Flu Shot, Better Start Looking (Your Time/Health)

Vitamin Boost (Your Time/Health)

And Now, A Travel-Size Rental Car (Your Time/Lifestyle)

Cashmere On The Cheap (Your Time/Lifestyle)
Cut-rate versions of the fine fabric have hit stores. How good are they?

Doomed Laughs (Your Time/Lifestyle)

How Pushy Are You? (Your Time/Tech)
No longer just for businesses, push-to-talk phones are heading your way

Putting Zoom Into Your Life (Your Time/Tech)

Tooning In (Your Time/Tech)


Quotes of the Day »

Get & Share
RUBEN DIAZ SR., New York state senator, on why he rallies against same-sex marriage while two of his brothers and a granddaughter are gay