Description
Fortune Magazine September 16, 2002 New York State Atty. Gen. Eliot Spitzer VG
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FEATURES
COVER STORIES / In Corporate America, It’s Cleanup Time
Under pressure, a slew of companies are now changing the way they do business. Will it last?
by Jerry Useem
The Mash Note Every CEO Wants—It’s Signed “Sincerely, Warren”
Andy Grove Speaks Out
The Enforcer
New York attorney general Eliot Spitzer has become the most feared man on Wall Street without jailing even one executive.
by Mark Gimein
The Un-CEO
A.G. Lafley doesn’t believe in the vision thing. All he’s done is turn around Procter & Gamble in 27 months.
by Katrina Brooker
9/11: UNFINISHED BUSINESS / Are We Safe Yet?
For all the warnings, there hasn’t been another attack. But the hard work of enhancing homeland security has only just begun. Here’s what we need to do.
by Bill Powell
The Return of Big Government
Federal spending is skyrocketing, but shockingly little of it is related to Sept. 11.
by Jeffrey H. Birnbaum
The Truth About Oil Security
Sorry, we’re stuck with foreign oil. But that doesn’t mean we can’t make our economy less vulnerable.
by Justin Fox
What’s a Life Worth?
Such is the imponderable question facing Ken Feinberg, the man running the government’s Sept. 11 victim fund. Are we really ready for the answer?
by Nicholas Varchaver
Why United’s Crisis Is Good for Flying
Waning hope of a taxpayer rescue is forcing the airline leader in bloated costs to face reality.
by Shawn Tully
This Time Tom Siebel Guessed Wrong
He never seemed to miss a call on the way up. And he never thought a downturn could last this long.
by Adam Lashinsky
Detroit’s Used-Car Blues
Detroit tried to beat imports with 0% financing and cut-rate leases. Now it’s drowning in used cars.
by Alex Taylor III
40 UNDER 40 / They Made Headlines During the Boom. Where Are They Now?
We find out what’s become of the grizzled veterans of the dot-com disaster since those dizzying market-cap highs.
by Alynda Wheat
America’s 40 Richest Under 40
Now that most boom-time dot-commers are too poor to make the list, who’s left? Well, Michael Dell is still No. 1—and richer than all the others combined.