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Medal
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Detector
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Col. David Hackworth,
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"America's Most Decorated Living Soldier" according to the man himself, is back
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in the news. Hackworth was instrumental in Newsweek 's story a year ago
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that Navy Chief of Staff Adm. Jeremy Boorda was wearing two medals he wasn't
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entitled to wear. Boorda committed suicide. Hackworth wrote in Newsweek ,
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"It is simply unthinkable an experienced officer would wear decorations he is
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not entitled to, awards that others bled for. There is no greater disgrace."
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Now it has come out that Hackworth himself was claiming two military
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decorations he wasn't entitled to claim: a Ranger Tab (indicating membership in
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a commando-style Ranger infantry unit) and a second Distinguished Flying Cross.
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Hackworth has now removed these decorations from the résumé on his home page.
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We can't
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resist noting that the first skeptical examination of Hackworth's career, his
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journalism, his military decorations, and his general trustworthiness occurred
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in Slate, last November ("Newsweek 's Major
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Embarrassment: He's Called Col. Hackworth"). The authors were David Plotz
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(associate editor of Slate) and Lt. Col. Charles Krohn (U.S. Army, retired).
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Newsweek dropped Col. Hackworth as a contributing editor at the end of
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last year. The Slate article went on to win a National Magazine Award, a
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Pulitzer, and the Nobel Prize for Literature.
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Life
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After Death
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Last
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week's "Strange Bedfellow" column by Jacob Weisberg, "Such a Deal: The
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Romance of Rent Control," misstated the title of Jane Jacobs' famous book,
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The Death and Life of Great American Cities . We had it as "The Life and
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Death ...," and, as Slate reader Dan Luscher of San Francisco points out, "The
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difference is meaningful."
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More
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Stuff
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Slate uncorks a gusher of
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new editorial features this week. Look for "Egghead" today, the
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other two beginning Wednesday, May 28. (Wednesday's edition of Slate is
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available on the Web around 5 p.m. Tuesday, PDT.)
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"Global
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Primer" is a weekly briefing on issues in foreign policy and world events.
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It will be prepared for Slate by the staff of Oxford Analytica, a British
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consulting firm that specializes in analysis of global political trends.
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Egghead is a reasonably
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lighthearted look at recent developments in scholarship and academia. Egghead
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will be laid monthly by the staff of Lingua Franca , the lively print
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magazine of academic life.
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"Chatterbox" is a
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first for Slate: a totally "live," seven-days-a-week feature. Using the same
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technology we use in Slate's reader-discussion forum, "The Fray," Chatterbox will be
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updated whenever the fancy strikes, independent of Slate's official daily
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posting schedule. It will contain whatever news scooplets, insights, and
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reflections Deputy Editor Jack Shafer can either solicit from Slate's staff and
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readers or, if necessary, download from his own head. The consensus of Jack's
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colleagues is that reader contributions are essential. A button on the
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"Chatterbox" page will make this easy, so please do join in.
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Who?
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The Slate "Diary" for
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Memorial Day week will be written by Beck. The editor has no idea who or what
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this is. But everyone else around here seems quite excited about it. So maybe
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you will be too. Beck's first contribution will appear Monday evening. Happy
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Memorial Day.
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--Michael Kinsley
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