Take care of my city, plants
By Mari Armstrong-Hough | May. 6, 2003At a time when it sometimes feels as if the whole world is going to hell, I realize that when I leave Madison for good this summer I will be ' ¦
At a time when it sometimes feels as if the whole world is going to hell, I realize that when I leave Madison for good this summer I will be ' ¦
There are so many things angering me today that I can barely concentrate for 200 words at a time. Actually, it could just be a new and more advanced stage ' ¦
International students face a number of challenges when they choose to attend American universities, especially with the new, stricter rules and enforcement in the wake of Sept. 11, 2001. And ' ¦
This weekend, North Korea unleashed a new round of paranoid accusations and ominous threats on the world. Even for North Korea, this weekend's comments were unusually intense. Kim Jong Il ' ¦
Not a lot of Americans have been to Cuba. The U.S. embargo prevents ordinary American citizens from traveling to Cuba and spending their money there, though recent changes in the ' ¦
Bush policies give timber companies free reign
Today's elections have broad impacts on student life
Yesterday President Bush announced his proposal for new pharmaceutical patent regulations. Bush's plan, like a Senate bill passed months ago, calls for better U.S. patent regulation of the pharmaceutical industry'though, ' ¦
Last Friday a California jury awarded life-long smoker, and more recently cancer victim, Betty Bullock a record $28 billion in punitive damages to be paid by tobacco giant Philip Morris. ' ¦
Drugs are expensive. Developing countries need drugs not only to address raging HIV/AIDS epidemics, but also to fight epidemics of malaria, tuberculosis, and various childhood diseases. But, forced by international ' ¦