Government Executive : Vol. 39 No. 8 (5/15/07)
FEATURES
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Launching a New Navy
Shipbuilding and buying bungles beset the Navy's top officer, Adm. Michael G. Mullen, as he sets the service on a new course.
By Greg Grant -
Fight to The Finish
As the Bush administration winds down, tensions between careerists and political appointees heat up.
By Karen Rutzick -
Running Lean
In a world of sense- and-respond logistics, vehicles call in when they're low on gas and fuel is delivered before they run out.
By David Perera -
Overcoming Katrina
The Federal Emergency Management Agency says its contracting problems are solved- the next huge disaster will be the true test.
By Robert Brodsky
NEWS+ANALYSIS
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Staying in the Fight
Troop tours lengthen, but no one agrees on the right duration for deployments. By Greg Grant -
Out of Its Depth
The Coast Guard's decision to take over Deepwater raises concern about the government's ability to oversee large contracts. By Katherine McIntire Peters -
Picture This
Rising accuracy rate makes face recognition technology a viable security tool. By Zack Phillips
ADVICE+DISSENT
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Managing Technology
If the Symptom Fits
Electronic patient files advance care, up to a point. By David Perera -
Management Matters
All Together Now
The workplace lines have blurred for government, for-profits and nonprofits.By Brian Friel -
Intelligence File
Gimme an S-P-Y
Intelligence cheerleaders promote solidarity in the field. By Shane Harris -
Viewpoint
The Long View
Enterprise architecture plans are useless without clear, relevant information. By Andrew N. Blumenthal -
Viewpoint
Katrina's Neglected Lesson
It's the people, not just policies, that make a disaster plan work. By Bruce C. Jones
IN EVERY ISSUE
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Editor's Notebook
The struggle to control agency rule-making. -
The Buzz
Polar bears on the hot seat, mind the tax gap, and uniformly unhappy. -
Outlook
Sometimes where there's smoke, there's just smoke.By Tom Shoop
NEXT STORY: Government Executive : Vol. 39 No. 7 (5/01/07)