Economist , Feb. 28 (posted Saturday, Feb. 28) The Iraq crisis taught the world two lessons, according to the cover editorial: 1) Diplomacy must be backed with the threat of violence. 2) All nations should have stood together, instead of "taking an independent turn on the world stage or scooping up lucrative contracts with Iraq." (That means you, France and Russia!) ... An article says most corporate Web sites are badly designed. Corporate sites are too specialized (geared only toward investors or customers), and their jazzy graphics take too long to download. New Republic , March 16 (posted Friday, Feb. 27) The editorial calls our failure to bomb Iraq "perhaps the greatest debacle for American foreign policy since the end of the cold war." The U.N. agreement will force no change in Saddam Hussein's behavior and boosts his prestige in the Arab world. ... The cover story says the Republican Party is hopelessly divided by a disagreement over the correct size for government. The Christian right wants to dissolve the massive Washington bureaucracies, but conservatives such as Steve Forbes and George W. Bush favor a powerful federal government that will "use morality-driven, activist foreign policy and a series of grand domestic initiatives to halt the right's drift into localism and insularity." New York Times Magazine , March 1 (posted Thursday, Feb. 26) The cover story says the worship of newness is the key to the Silicon Valley economy. New ideas (3-D-graphic modeling) earn millions and render old ideas (2-D-graphic modeling) instantly worthless. Entrepreneurs move on to the next big thing before the last big thing is even established. (Full disclosure: Slate contributor Michael Lewis wrote the article. For Lewis' take on a related subject in Slate , see "Scary Smart.") ... An article describes the calculated creation of a trashy hardcover thriller. The cynical authors analyzed best sellers, parroted them, and hired extra writers to fix the manuscript. They sold it for $2 million. ... A story marvels at the Princeton basketball team, ranked eighth in the nation and the best Ivy League squad in a generation. Princeton's fluid, artful passing and selfless teamwork allow it to beat teams with more raw talent. The players remain committed to their academic work. (No kidding.) Time and Newsweek , March 2 (posted Tuesday, Feb. 24) Kofi Annan ruins Newsweek 's unleash-the-dogs-of-war cover package. Newsweek 's war preview includes a map listing U.S. weaponry and its concentrations, thumbnail sketches of American military commanders, a short essay from Madeleine Albright explaining the need for a military strike, and a story on Saddam Hussein's intricate security measures (he maintains surgically altered body doubles). Time 's cover package focuses on Clinton's failure to sell the war to the American public. Time also runs an essay by George Bush in which he claims that removing Saddam in 1991 would have upset the balance of power in the Middle East. Time says Dolly the cloned sheep could be a fake. There is a million-to-one chance that the clone was not of an adult ewe but of a fetus the ewe was carrying. A Newsweek article says 1950s "modern" furniture is back. Clean lines and blond wood are showing up everywhere, even in the furniture of Men in Black and Friends . U.S. News & World Report , March 2 (posted Tuesday, Feb. 24) Graduate-school rankings. Winners: Yale law, Harvard business, Harvard med, Columbia education, and MIT engineering. Mentioned only in passing: The Association of American Law Schools requested that the magazine stop publishing rankings because they're "misleading and dangerous." ... An article says that Paula Jones' case has weakened. Jones can prove no workplace hardships (save for not getting flowers on Secretaries' Day) and can't use Lewinsky evidence in her case. ... U.S. News asks novelists how they would solve Clinton's Lewinsky problem if it were their new book. Jackie Collins: "[Clinton would] confess that Monica Lewinsky is his illegitimate daughter," thereby explaining their close relationship and the need for secrecy. Tom Clancy: "My characters have a moral code from which they would not depart." Weekly Standard , March 2 (posted Tuesday, Feb. 24) A cover feature on Alabama's "religious war": The Standard takes God's side. Lawsuits are being waged to stop an Alabama judge from displaying the Ten Commandments and to prevent a school district from allowing prayer before class and games. Alabamians--77 percent of whom favor school prayer--are outraged by the legal meddling, none more than Gov. Fob James Jr., a dynamite-fishing good old boy who believes that states are allowed to establish religion. According to James, the First Amendment only prohibits congressional establishment of religion. ... Also, yet another editorial urging the United States to attack Iraq: "A fig-leaf compromise brokered by the U.N. would be disastrous." --Seth Stevenson