Noticed in the Press
Archive:
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A report by Jeremy Lott in the May 3 edition of The Washington Times: "From Bill Gates to Thomas Aquinas: Bible software company spreads the Word"
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A report by Laura Landro in the April 16 edition of The Wall Street Journal: "The Simple Idea That Is Transforming Health Care"
A report by Susan Freinkel in the April 17 edition of The Washington Post: "If the food's in plastic, what's in the food?"
A book review by Claire Gillen in the April 18 edition of The Washington Times. The book is: "Adam and Eve After the Pill: Paradoxes of the Sexual Revolution" by Mary Eberstadt, Ignatius Press, $19.95, 175 pages
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In the April 4 edition of The Washington Times, under the heading "Meeting the Press" of the Embassy Row column:"The Hungarian official who helped write the country's controversial new constitution has added a news conference to his visit to Washington this week. Jozsef Szajer, a member of the European Parliament from Hungary's ruling Fidesz party will meet with reporters at 4 pm Thursday at the National Press Club..."
In the April 3 issue of The Wall Street Journal, a report by Gordon Fairclough: "Hungary's President Quits in Scandal"
In the same issue, an op-ed by John H. Cochrane: "What to Do on the Day After Obamacare"
And a report by Shirley S. Wang: "Chinese Medicine Goes Under the Microscope"
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A book review in the March 31-April 1 edition of The Wall Street Journal by Jennifer Siegel with the title:"Food Strategies, food tactics" The book is: "The Taste of War: World War II and the Battle for Food" by Lizzie Collingham, Penguin Press, $36, 634 pages
In the same issue, a book review by Jeremy Bernstein: "Hitler's Gift to American Science" The books are: "The Quantum Exodus" by Gordon Fraser, Oxford, $45, 267 pages "Keeper of Nuclear Conscience" by Andrew Brown, Oxford, $29.95, 347 pages
In the April 2 edition of The Washington Times, a book review by Joseph C. Goulden: "How Soviet air force played its part" The book is:"Red Phoenix Rising: The Soviet Air Force in World War II by Von Hardesty and Ilya Grinberg, University Press of Kansas, $34.95, 305 pages There is reference to a wartime incident where the Soviets refused to return three B-29 Superfortress planes to their American allies.
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An announcement in the Embassy Row column under "Diplomatic Traffic" of the April 2 edition of The Washington Times: Jozsef Szajer, member of the European Parliament and one of the authors of the new Hungarian Constitution, and Andras Koltai, member of the new Hungarian Media Authority will visit next Wednesday the German Marshall Fund in Washington.
In the March 31- April 1 issue of The Wall Street Journal, The Weekend Interview by James Taranto: "When the Archbishop Met the President" The interview recounts a meeting between president Obama and Cardinal Timothy Dolan.
In the same issue, a book review by Philip Delves Broughton: "Democracy's Quiet Champion" The book is: "The Lady and the Peacock" by Peter Popham, The Experiment, $27.50, $448 pages The work focuses on the just elected pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.
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An op-ed by Fred Hiatt in the March 26 edition of The Washington Post: "North Korea dehumanizing treatment of its citizens is hiding in plain sight"
In the March 25 issue of The Washington Post, a book review by DinaTemple-Raston: "Law enforcer or lawbreaker?" The book is "Enemies" 'A History of the FBI", by Tim Weiner, Random House, $30, 537 pages
In the Weekend Edition of The Wall Street Journal of March 24-25, a book review under the series Masterpiece by Danny Heitman: "Digressions on a Diagnosis" The book is "The Anatomy of Melancholy" by Robert Burton, first published in 1621.
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In the March 23 edition of The Washington Post an op-ed by Michael Gerson: "Obama's ambivalent leadership on Afghanistan"
In the March 23-24 Weekend Edition of The Wall Street Journal an opinion piece by Alberto Mingardi: "The European Union According to Hayek"
A book review in the March 22 issue of The Wall Street Journal by William Anthony Hay: "A New Nation Tests Its Strength" The book is "Among the Powers of the Earth" by Eliga H. Gould, Harvard, $45, 301 pages
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A commentary by Joshua Rozenberg in the March 20 edition of The Guardian: "Meet Tünde Handó"
In the March 21 issue of The Washington Post, an op-ed by Harold Meyerson: "Choosing sides in Europe" There is a reference to a pre World War I "illusion" of socialist solidarity.
From the March 22 edition of The Hindu of New Delhi, a report by R. Ramachandran: "Hungarian mathematician Endre Szemerédi gets 2012 Abel Prize"
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In the March 20 issue of The Washington Post, a write-up on Hungary in the "In the Loop" column by Al Kamen.
Two book reviews from the Weekend Edition of March 17-18 of The Wall Street Journal: Andrew Roberts review: "A Fractious Friendship" The book is: "Reagan and Thatcher" by Richard Aldous, Norton, $27.95, 342 pages
And a review by Bob Metcalfe, with the title: "Where the Future Came From" The book is: "The Idea Factory" by Jon Gertner, $29.95, 422 pages The book offers a research narrative in communication technology from Bell Labs to Silicon Valley.
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An art review by Peter Marks in the March 17 edition of The Washington Post: 'Gypsies' Lively import has a wandering plot" The presentation by Budepest's Katona Jozsef Theatre at the Eisenhower Theater of the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC was, according to a theatergoer from the Hungarian community of Washington, liberal in the use of profanity but quite short on making a connection with the audience, many of them choosing not to stay past intermission.
A report by David Morgan in the March 18 issue of The Washington Post: "Komen, Catholic Church have long had complicated relationship" The founder of Susan B. Komen for the Cure is the former Ambassador to Hungary, Nancy Brinker.
In the same edition, a book review by Gerard DeGroot, professor of history at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland, with the title: "Naive Americans at play in Hitler's world" The book is "Hitlerland" 'American Eyewitnesses to the Nazi Rise to Power' by Andrew Nagorski, Simon & Schuster, $28, 358 pages
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From the Style section of the March 10 edition of The Washington Post, an article entitled "Gypsies" at the Kennedy Center. An adaptation of the 1931 play by Jeno Tersanszky.
An article from the March 10 issue of The Wall Street Journal: "How to Be Creative" by Jonah Lehrer.
In the same issue, a book review with the title: "Modern Love" The books are: "The Paradox of Love" by Pascal Bruckner, Princeton, $29.95, 266 pages "The Curious History of Love" by Jean-Claude Kaufmann, $17.95, 178 pages
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A report by Jonathan Allen and Alex Isenstadt in the March 8 edition of POLITICO: "Kucinich Loss Is End of An Era"
An op-ed by former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in the March 9 issue of The Washington Post: "Russia's youthful vanguard"
In the same edition, a report by Anthony Faiola from Bideford, England: "Public prayer stirs culture war in Britain"
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An op-ed by columnist Anne Applebaum in the March 7 edition of The Washington Post: "Behind Putin's victory"
In the March 8 issue of The Washington Post, an obituary by Matt Schudel: "Albert 'Sonny' Abramson, 94, Washington area developer had a major role in launching U.S. Holocaust Museum"
In the same issue, an obituary by Robert Barr: "Norman St. John-Stevas, 82, British politician was known for his wit" Contributed to the quality of governance in the British government.
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Just a note without attachment: In the April 16 edition of The Washington Times, the Embassy Row column announced for Tuesday, a commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the birth of Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg at the Hungarian Embassy in Washington, DC with keynote speaker Zsolt Nemeth, Deputy Foreign Minister of Hungary.
A book review in the April 14-15 edition of The Wall Street Journal by Stanley G. Payne: "The History War" The book is "The Spanish Holocaust" by Paul Preston, Norton, $35, 700 pages. The review also lists other titles related to the Spanish Civil War (1936-39)
In the same edition, a book review by David Mason: "What Will Survive of Us"The book is "The Complete Poem of Philip Larkin: Edited by Archie Burnett, Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $40, 729 pages
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An op-ed by E.J. Dionne, Jr. in the April 5 edition of The Washington Post: "A Holy Week Entreaty"
In the same issue, a report by Ernesto Londono: "A culture of exploitation" 'In Afghanistan, practice of men grooming underage boys as sex partners is on the rise'
In the March 31 edition of The Washington Post a book review by Jonathan Yardely. The book is: "The Accidental City: Improvising New Orleans" by Lawrence N. Powel, Harvard U. Press, $29.95, 448 pages
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In the May 3 edition of The Washington Post, a reader's comment on Robert J. Samuelson op-ed of April 30:"The 'real Washington'? Lobbyists, lawyers and publicists"
A commentary in the May 3 issue of The Washington Post by columnist Suzanne Fields: "Engulfed by a rising tide of mediocrity" 'Americans lack knowledge needed for 21st century success'
In the same issue, a report by Denise Lavoie: "Harvard-MIT partnership to offer free online courses on global scale"
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An opinion piece by George P. Shultz and Eric A. Hanushek in the May 1 edition of The Wall Street Journal: "Education is Key to a Healthy Economy"
In the same issue, a report by Shirley S. Wang: "Genes May Link Disparate Diseases" The article features physicist Albert-László Barabási of Northeastern University's Center for Complex Network Research, Boston.
In the April 30 edition of The Washington Post, an op-ed by columnist Robert Samuelson: "Here's what Washington really does"
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In the April 30 edition of The Washington Post, an op-ed by Lawrence Summers, with the title: "Europe's growth challenge"
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An art review from the series Masterpiece in the April 28-29 edition of The Wall Street Journal by E.A. Carmean, Jr.: "Denying Death" The masterpiece is "Vanitas I" (1938) by Georges Braque. (See attached picture).
In the April 29 issue of The Washington Post, a book review by John Pomfret: "A Chinese uprising that rattled the world"The book is: "Autumn in the Heavenly Kingdom: China, the West, and the Epic Story of the Taiping Civil War" by Stephen R. Platt, Knopf, $30, 470 pages
In the April 27 edition of The Washington Post, an obituary by Adam Bernstein: "Joe Muranyi, 84, Clarinetist accompanied Louis Armstrong"
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An op-ed by columnist Charles Krauthammer in the April 27 edition of The Washington Post: "While Syria burns"
An op-ed by David Ignatius in the April 26 issue of The Washington Post: "As France goes, so goes Europe?"
In the same edition, an op-ed by Fareed Zakaria: "A smarter investment"
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A commentary by columnist Suzanne Fields in the April 26 edition of The Washington Times: "Obama's atrocities policy: Too little, too late" 'Confronting evil requires courage to act'
In the same issue, a commentary by Franklin Graham: "Bombing Sudan's air bases only way to protect innocents" 'Children are dying. We are their last hope'
In the April 26 edition of The Washington Post, an obituary by Emily Langer: "Irving Millman, 88, Microbiologist was a key player in developing hepatitis B vaccine"
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An op-ed by Robert Samuelson in the April 23 edition of The Washington Post: "The pain in Spain could hit worldwide economy"
A report by Gordon Fairclough and Gergo Racz in the April 24 issue of The Wall Street Journal: "Hungary Pledges Cuts Aimed at EU Demands"
An op-ed by Robert Samuelson in the April 25 edition of The Washington Post: "The Swedish model for economic recovery"
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A report by Amy Docker Marcus in the April 21-22 edition of The Wall Street Journal: "Lab Mistakes Hobble Cancer Studies But Scientists Slow to Take Remedies"
In the same issue, a book review by Richard Dowden: "Greetings from Africa"The books are "Africa's Moment" by Jean-Michel Severino & Oliver Ray, Polity, $25, 317 pages "Season of Rains" by Stephen Ellis, Chicago, $25, 215 pages
In the April 22 edition of The Washington Post, a book review by Warren Bass: "If your country stinks, who do you blame" The book is "Why Nations Fail" 'The Origins of Power, Prosperity and Poverty' by Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson, Crown, $30, 529 pages There is a reference to Hungary in the review.
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A review from the series Masterpiece in the Weekend Edition of The Wall Street Journal of April 21-22, by H. George Fletcher, with the title: "A Bridge to Eternity" The masterpiece is "The Rood Loft of the Church of St. Étienne Du-Mont(1626)" We are also sending a picture of the loft.
In the same issue, a report by Andrea Wulf: "The Celestial Event That Sparked a Revolution"
Also, in the same edition, a report by Amir Efrati: "A Quixotic Quest to Mine Asteroids" The report features Charles Simonyi.
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A commentary by columnist Suzanne Fields in the April 12 edition of The Washington Times: "Newest Jewish voices from Germany"
In the April 13 issue of The Washington Post, an obituary by Emily Langer: "Raymond Aubrac, French Resistance Leader, dies at 97"
In the same edition, a report by Joel Achenbach: "Even if Titanic wasn't unsinkable, fascination with it seems to be"
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An opinion piece in the April 11 edition of The Washington Times by Ambassador Andras Simonyi: "A case for overhaul of NATO’s partnerships"
The obituary of Jack Tramiel, Holocaust survivor and businessman, by Matt Schudel in the April 11 issue of The Washington Post: "Jack Tramiel, hard-driving Commodore computer visionary, dies at 84"
An op-ed by columnist Richard Cohen in the April 10 edition of The Washington Post: "With Ike, art does not imitate his life"
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In the April 7 edition of The Washington Post an interview with Prime Minister Viktor Orban by Lally Weymouth.
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A book review by Elaine Pagels in the March 3 edition of The Wall Street Journal: "What Revelation Reveals" 'It is the Bible's strangest book. Even stranger, it was only one of many now-forgotten 'books of revelation'
In the same edition, a book review by Konstantin Kakaes: "The Nucleus of the Digital Age" The book is "Turing's Cathedral" by George Dyson, Pantheon, $29.95, 491 pages The central figure of the book is Hungarian-born mathematician John von Neumann (1903-1957)
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A commentary by Marion Smith in the National Online Review of March 5, 2012, with the title: "Crusade against Hungary"
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A commentary by Robert Kagan in the February 3 edition of The Washington Post: "Powering down" 'A decline in U.S. military might could upend the world order'
An op-ed by Fareed Zakaria in the February 2 issue of The Washington Post: "The post-American global reality"
A report by Shirley S. Wang in the January 31 edition of The Wall Street Journal: "A New Target In Fighting Brain Disease: Metals"
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An op-ed by Bret Stephens in the January 31 edition of The Wall Street Journal: "The Decline of Human Rights"
In the same issue, a book review by W. Bradford Wilcox: "Values Inequality". The book is "Coming Apart" by Charles Murray, Crown Forum, $27, 497 pages. The author argues that a large swath of America - poor and working class whites - is turning away from traditional values and losing ground.
Also, a fine arts review by Barrymore Laurence Scherer: "A Monumental Composer in Context". The piece is: Johann Sebastian Bach's Mass in B Minor.
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A report by Michael Birnbaum in the February 1 edition of the Washington Post: "EU ties fueling deep divisions in Hungary"
An op-ed by Michael Gerson in the January 31 issue of The Washington Post: "Catholics betrayed"
An op-ed by Robert Samuelson un the January 30 edition of The Washington Post: "The realities of a 'Buffett tax'"
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An op-ed by E.J. Dionne in the January 30 edition of The Washington Post: "Obama's breach of faith"
An op-ed by writer Richard Schiffman in the January 28 issue of The Washington Post: "Why we should work less"
A commentary by Professor Alison Gopnik in the January 28 edition of The Wall Street Journal: "What's wrong with the teenage mind?"
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A report by Dominic Hinde and Louise Osborne in the January 26 edition of The Washington Times: "Scots gain momentum for split from England"
A report by Jake Sherman and Darren Goode in the January 26 issue of POLITICO: "Keystone Decision Looms for GOP"
A book review in the January 21-22 edition of the Wall Street Journal by Tess Lewis: "Dispatches from the Lost Empire". The book is "Joseph Roth: A Life in Letters" Translated by Michael Hofmann, Norton, $39.95, 549 pages. The "lost empire' is a reference to the Dual Monarchy of Austria-Hungary (1867-1918)
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A report by Michael Birnbaum in the January 23 edition of The Washington Post: "Croatia votes for EU membership"
An opinion piece by Herb Keinon in the January 21 issue of The Jerusalem Post: "Diplomacy: The Israeli feel to Hungary's crisis"
A commentary under the heading of 'Masterpiece', in the January 21 edition of the Wall Street Journal, by David Dubal: "Radical Romanticism". The piece is the B Minor Sonata (1857) by Franz Liszt (1811-1886).
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A report by Sheila Wang in the January 17 edition of The Wall Street Journal: "A Gut Check for Many Ailments"
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An op-ed in the January 10 edition of The Wall Street Journal Europe by George Kopits, senior scholar at the Washington-based Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars: "Hungary's Collision Course with the EU"
In the January 12 issue of The Wall Street Journal, a report by Robert Lee Hotz: "An Otherworldly Discovery: Billions of Other Planets" The science report makes reference to HATNet, the Hungarian-made Automated Telescope Network.
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An editorial in the January 10 edition of The Washington Post, with the title: "Assault on democracy" 'Europe needs to defend human rights in Hungary'.
A report by author John Tirman in the January 7 issue of The Washington Post: "Why do we ignore the civilians killed in American wars?"
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A commentary by Neil Buckley in the January 7-8 edition of The Financial Times: "Orban acts to head off more protests".
An opinion piece by Robert Kagan in the January 8 issue of The Washington Post: "New Year, Old Problems".
A report from the art world by Jonathan Lopez in the January 7-8 edition of The Wall Street Journal: "The Night Watch" by Rembrandt (1642).
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A report by Gordon Fairclough and Veronika Gulyas in the January 6 edition of The Wall Street Journal: "Hungary Signals New Openness to Talks on Bank Law".
In the same issue, an opinion piece by Fouad Ajami: "America and the Solitude of the Syrians".
A commentary by Rafael Medoff in the January 6 edition of The Washington Times: "Too much Holocaust?" 'Never forget means never'.
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In the January 3 edition of The Washington Post, the obituary by Emily Langer of Jerzy Kluger, 90: "Late pope's boyhood pal helped mend Catholic-Jewish relations".
In the same issue, a report by the Associated Press on Hungary: "EU hold off on aid amid bank law anger".
In the January 4 edition of The Wall Street Journal, an opinion piece by Mr. Zoltan Kovacs, Minister of State for Government Communication: "Hungary's Reboot"
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An op-ed by Martin Klingst in the February 5 edition of The Washington Post" "Don't buy the GOP's 'Europe'"
An op-ed by David Ignatius in the February 3 issue of The Washington Post: "Is Israel preparing to attack Iran?"
A blog by Francis Fukuyama in "American Interest" on January 23 with the title: "Do Institutions Really Matter?" With a reply on February 2 by Dr. Zoltan Kovacs, State Secretary for Communication of Hungary.
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In the February 5 edition of The Washington Post, three book reviews:
A book review by Thomas Bryne Edsall: "Perils of America's deep political rift" The books are: "Disconnect: The Breakdown of Representation in American Politics" by Morris P. Fiorina and Samuel J. Abrams, U. of Oklahoma Press, $24.95, 249 p. and "The Disappearing Center: Engaged Citizens, Polarization and American Democracy" by Alan I. Abramowitz, Yale U. Press $24, 208 p.
A book review by Tracy Lee Simmons: "God's law and the power of the state" The book is: "Roger Williams and the Creation of the American Soul" 'Church, State and the Birth of Liberty' by John M. Barry, Viking, $35, 464 p.
A book review by Joanna Scutts: "Between spiritual yearnings and feet of clay" The book is: "The Lives of Margaret Fuller" by John Matteson, Norton, $32.95, 510 p.
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The Common Sense Society has launched a new blog through Paprika Politik. We are sending a commentary dated on February 14, 2012, by Tom Bako with the title: "Fidesz vs. Conservatism? Reflections of a Transylvanian-American"
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A commentary by Ambassador Kurt Volker in the March 2 issue of The Christian Science Monitor: "Russian elections: U.S. and Europe must rethink the 'reset'.
A report in the March 3 edition of The Washington Post: "James Q. Wilson, co-author of 'broken windows' policing theory, dies in Boston at age 80"
An opinion piece by Arthur C. Brooks, president of The American Enterprise Institute in the March 3 issue of The Wall Street Journal: "Social Science With a Soul"
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In the March 3 edition of The Washington Post, a Letter to the Editor by Ambassador to Hungary in the United States György Szapáry, with the title: "In Hungary, media freedom is real "The letter was written in response to the opinion piece of February 27, with the title: "A free voice for Hungary"
In the March 2 issue of The Washington Post, a Letter to the Editor by Yehuda Lukacs of Alexandria, with the title: "Hungary's apathetic youth", also in response to the opinion piece of February 27.
Also, a book review published in the February 29 issue of The Washington Times by Joseph C. Goulden. The review has a reference to Vladimir Putin and the current regime in Russia.The book is: "SMERSH: Stalin's Secret Weapon" 'Soviet Military Counterintelligence in WWII" by J.Birstein, Foreword by Nigel West, Biteback Publishing, $29.95, 512 pages
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An opinion piece in the February 29 edition of The Wall Street Journal Europe, with the title: "All Hands on Hungary" 'The EU takes its deficit limits very seriously - for some countries'
An opinion piece in the February 29 issue of The Wall Street Journal by Ruth Wisse: "Harvard's Latest Assault on Israel"
In the same edition, a book review by Ian Brunskill: "The Man in the Middle" The book is "Walther Rathenau: Weimar's Fallen Statesman" by Shulamit Volkov, Yale, $25, 240 pages
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Last week the Hungarian daily "Magyar Nemzet" published an opinion piece on February 22 with the title: "Statement of the Hungarian American Coalition" and with the subtitle: "Give Hungary a chance"
This published piece was based on a statement released by the Hungarian American Coalition on February 17, expressing concern for unusually harsh tone of some of the Western media against Hungary's current government.
We are sending both the Hungarian language opinion piece and, in English, the text of the Coalition statement.
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In the February 25-26 edition of The Wall Street Journal, The Weekend Interview by Raymond Zhong with British historian Norman Davies:"The Emperor of Vanished Kingdoms" 'Europe's pre-eminent historian says all nations eventually end - even the United Kingdom, and perhaps America'
In the same issue, a report by Gregory L. White: "After Putin"
In the February 27 edition of The Washington Post, an op-ed by Charles Gati, Miklós Haraszti and Mark Palmer, with the title: "A free voice for Hungary"
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An op-ed by former British prime minister Gordon Brown in the February 22 edition of The Washington Post: "What Europe needs: a global growth plan"
A report by Joel Greenberg in the February 23 issue of The Washington Post: "Sense of inevitable war grips Israel"
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A commentary based on an upcoming book by Alain de Botton in the February 18-19 edition of The Wall Street Journal: "Religion for Everyone" The book is entitled "Religion for Atheists: A Non-Believers Guide to the Uses of Religion" by Pantheon.
In the same edition an art review by Jack Flam in the MASTERPIECE series: "A Convergence of Faith and Reason" The artwork is Masaccio's "Holy Trinity" (1427) in the Church of Santa Maria Novella, Florence.
In the February 19 issue of The Washington Post, an obituary by Matt Schudel: "Robert K. Webb, 89, UMBC professor, British history scholar"
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A report by William Wan and Michelle Boorstein in the February 15 edition of The Washington Post: "China barred a top U.S. diplomat" 'Visa denied for religion envoy'
In the same issue, a report by Monica Hesse: "Nancy Brinker: The steely force in the Komen controversy"
In the February 15 edition of The Washington Times a report by Jill Lawless: "A call to embrace Britain's Christian heritage"
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An op-ed in the February 14 edition of The Wall Street Journal by Bret Stephens: "Who Will Tell the Truth About China?"
An op-ed by Yu Jie, author, in the February 14 issue of The Washington Post: "China's long reach" 'The myth of China as a harmless tiger'
In the same edition, an op-ed by columnist Roger Cohen: "In denial, if not decline" 'Obama in denial about American influence'
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A commentary by Robert Kagan in the Wall Street Journal of February 11-12, with the title: "Why the World needs America"
A report by Stephen Glain in the February 10 edition of The Washington Post: "In Egypt's bread, sign of economic weakness"
An op-ed by Andrew Roberts in the February 9 issue of The Wall Street Journal: "How the Queen Saved and Soothed Britain"
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An op-ed by Vladimir Putin in the February 9 edition of The Washington Post: "An honest democracy for Russia"
An op-ed by Anne Applebaum in the February 8 issue of The Washington Post: "Russia's Potemkin democracy"
In the same edition, an op-ed by Kathleen Parker: "Defending faith"
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A commentary by Francis Tapon in the December 27 edition of The Washington Post: "Eastern Europe: Innovation's hidden hub".
An op-ed in the December 31 issue of The Washington Post by Sergey Radchenko: "China's lockdown on truth".
An obituary by Emily Langer in the January 2 edition of The Washington Post: "Eva Zeisel, 105. Her designs brought a simple, modern touch to dinner tables".
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