It's been real ...
Natashia Gregoire
Editor emerita
Two strangers from opposite sides of the globe sat in a musty corner office in Vardaman Hall surrounded only by the hum of the generators and the creaking of the old building.
The young reporter, inexperienced in her trade, tried to discern the meaning of the Israeli peace process and its impact on Ole Miss students. The Arab was all too willing to talk.
Kevorkian's actions cheapen valuable gift of life
They say that a man who chooses to defend himself in a court of law has a fool for an attorney. Never could this have been more true than in the murder trial of Dr. Jack Kevorkian in Pontiac, Michigan, last week.
Kevorkian, the renowned assisted suicide doctor of Oakland County in Michigan, was convicted of second-degree murder for the lethal injection of a combination of chemicals and drugs into the body of 52-year-old Thomas Youk, who was suffering from Lou Gehrig's disease.
Serbian conflict due to media-perpetuated myths oversights
After days of murderous bombing campaigns, NATO planes have run out of military targets. Bombs are now falling on schools and hospitals. Hundreds of civilians have already been killed, and thousands are wounded. Infrastructure supporting the civilized society of Yugoslavia is collapsing. According to NATO Secretary Solana, whose catch-all words are repeated a hundred times on CNN, "NATO is acting to prevent a humanitarian catastrophe."
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