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Also in this issue:
A Letter
from the President
Past Issues:
#3: Fall 2001
#2: Spring 2001
#1: Summer 2000
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The
BackPage
Fighting Terrorism: For the U.S. and Russia, One War but Two Agendas
by Oksana Antonenko
Oksana Antonenko, Senior Fellow and Program Director for Russia
and Eurasia at the International Institute for Strategic Studies
in London, examines changes in the relationship between the U.S.
and Russia post-September 11th
Two High Schools
Near Ground Zero
Afterwards: May 21, 2002
by Ambika Kapur
Tuesday, September 11, 2001: A regular day for students at two high
schools in downtown New York City. With backpacks slung over their
shoulders, they filed into the classrooms of the colorful school
buildings. A light buzz filled the rooms as students went about
their daily routines. Math for some, gym for others. And then: a
loud bang that shook the school walls.
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a
footnote to History
Andrew Carnegie had a long-standing interest in world peace. I
am drawn more to this cause than to any, he wrote in 1907.
Like other leading internationalists of his time, Carnegie believed
that war could be eliminated by stronger international laws and
organizations. Between 1900 and 1914, he gave generously in support
of this belief, funding projects such as the Peace Palace at The
Hague, the Pan American Union building (now the Organization of
American States building) in Washington, D.C., the Central American
Court of Justice in Costa Rica and giving $10 million to establish
the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
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