Authors

Reid Collins

by | Jul 21, 2003

Add weather to the moon — bad weather comprised of gale-force winds and intermittent rain — and you would have links golf à la England and Scotland. The advantage of moon-links would be the lessened gravity which enabled the late…

by | Jul 14, 2003

The Columbia Accident Investigation Board is on the verge of declaring the probable cause of the February 1 shuttle disaster to be the chunk of foam that struck the leading edge of the left wing during the first moments of…

by | Jun 25, 2003

What is right and constitutional today will be wrong and unconstitutional in 25 years. Thus spake Sandra Day O’Connor in the majority Supreme Court decision approving the University of Michigan Law School’s race-based admissions policy, a decision applauded by liberals…

by | Jun 20, 2003

So Maryland’s Montgomery County Police Chief has been forced to resign in order to write a book. The travails of Chief Charles Moose have become national news, with an ethics commission insisting he may not profit from his duties as…

by | Jun 5, 2003

Okay, Martha, I was wrong; being a “babe” isn’t enough to keep the Feds from making a felony case out of trying to save 40 grand when the balloon’s going up the next day and you got it from the…

by | May 27, 2003

It is routine. The President waits in front of the amphitheater entrance for the wreath to come forward and then he moves forward with it and places it on a stand before the Tomb of the Unknowns. After taps, the…

by | May 21, 2003

The attempt to bridge the difference between men and women when it comes to combat assignment in the armed services has failed. If Saddam Hussein has served no other earthly purpose we can at least thank him for that lesson….

by | May 15, 2003

It has become journalism’s book of Job, the struggle waged on the pages of the May 11, 2003, edition of the New York Times. As if two unseen forces, that of politically correct and that of correct procedure, had decided…

by | Apr 8, 2003

Normally, New York Times‘ editorials are like telemarketers, easily dismissed and hardly ever heard out. But Monday’s, “No Hush for the Masters,” bears a little read, like a 17-foot downhill putt. It is a call for disruption. Starts out bucolically:…

by | Mar 24, 2003

When it’s over, somebody ought to leave a note in the drawer for the next administration: “Let’s not do it this way again.” Advertising that you plan to drop 3,000 bombs on Baghdad in an opening salvo designed to produce…

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