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George F. Will pays tribute to “America’s most consequential public intellectual of the twentieth century.”
An old friend and former student reflects on how satisfying it must be for Milton Friedman to see how dramatically his ideas have reshaped our world. By Hoover fellow Gary S. Becker.

In a ceremony at the White House this past May, President George W. Bush honored Milton Friedman for his lifetime achievements. Herewith the president’s remarks.

It’s time to bring elementary and secondary education out of the nineteenth century and into the twenty-first. By Hoover fellow Milton Friedman.
We need the school choice that voucher programs would introduce, but we also need to make certain such voucher programs are properly structured. How government rules can make voucher programs—or break them. By Hoover fellow Terry M. Moe.
How to improve our public schools? Many policymakers argue that we can start by holding students, teachers, schools, and school districts accountable for student performance. This approach may sound perfectly reasonable—but it has the education profession up in arms. By Hoover fellow Diane Ravitch.
Is spending more money the way to improve our public schools? In a word, no. By Hoover fellow Hanna Skandera and Hoover associate director Richard Sousa.
The midterm elections this November could well prove the closest in half a century. With control of both houses of Congress hanging in the balance, David W. Brady and Jeremy C. Pope offer their predictions.
Hoover fellow Stanley Kurtz on the uncertain future of the American family.
Posturing in the wake of corporate scandals, Congress has passed new accounting reform legislation that “contains provisions with the potential to cause more market havoc than a dozen Enrons.” By Clark S. Judge.
The content of this article is only available in the print edition.
It’s scandal time in corporate America. Hoover overseer Bowen H. "Buzz" McCoy explains how the public trust can be reestablished.
If economists are so smart, why are developing countries so poor? By Hoover fellows Stephen Haber, Douglass C. North, and Barry R. Weingast.
Hoover fellows Terry L. Anderson and Laura E. Huggins on the right that is essential for a democracy to prosper—the right to property.
Why was there a shortage of power in California? Largely because there was a shortage of common sense. Hoover fellow James L. Sweeney derives lessons from the energy crisis.
As it turns 20, how healthy is the biopharmaceutical industry? That depends on how you define “healthy.” By Hoover fellow Henry I. Miller.
Hoover fellow Tod Lindberg on George W. Bush’s new new world order.
The danger is immediate. Saddam Hussein must be removed. By Hoover fellow George P. Shultz.
The United States needs to fight a broad war on terror—not simply a war on Saddam Hussein. By Hoover fellow Michael McFaul.
The West—and the United States in particular—has before it a battle that it must win if civilization is to prosper. Jeffrey Hart places the war on terror in historical context.
There is no substitute for victory in the war on terror. By Daniel Pipes.
Bruce Berkowitz on the challenges the U.S. intelligence community faces in the war on terror.
How Yasir Arafat’s deadly gamble failed. A firsthand report from the Middle East by Hoover fellow Robert Zelnick.
SIDEBAR: Defiant Normalcy.
A referendum on the euro is likely within a year. Is the pound sterling doomed? An assessment by Kurt Keilhacker and Hoover fellow Gerald A. Dorfman.
In Queen Elizabeth’s Golden Jubilee year of 2002, Gerald A. Dorfman reflects on the Anglophilia that struck his small New England town during the queen’s coronation in 1952.
What’s so great about America? Reflections on his adopted country by Dinesh D’Souza—Bombay native, American citizen, and Hoover fellow.
How Ronald Reagan won the Cold War. By Hoover fellow Peter Schweizer.
How Japanese naval air power went down to defeat. A study of the Second World War by Hoover fellow Mark R. Peattie.
In 1921, Herbert Hoover’s American Relief Administration staged a campaign to battle a devastating famine in Soviet Russia. Hoover fellow Bertrand M. Patenaude examines a little-known chapter in the history of American-Soviet relations.