Economist , April 25 (posted Saturday, April 25) The cover editorial claims that the conflict in Israel no longer poses a threat to the world because it has become a localized crisis. In time, peace will come and Israel will emerge with its borders intact. Complication: To keep its borders stable, Israel will have to stop treating its one million Israeli Arabs like an "unwanted presence." ... A paternalistic editorial calls America's Latinos "a minority worth cultivating." The piece praises Latinos for being the "uncomplaining greasers of the wheels of the American economy," and doing "the jobs that others refuse to do." Unlike African-Americans, Latinos have no racial ax to grind and so can act as the "builders of bridges" between blacks and whites. ... A story exposes the undercover shilling of many Hollywood stars. Guaranteed that the clips will never air outside Japan, several major stars have filmed ads for Japanese TV: Leonardo DiCaprio for a credit card, Sylvester Stallone for ham sausage, Jodie Foster for coffee, and Harrison Ford for beer. The stars earn up to $4 million for a 15 second spot. New Republic , May 11 (posted Friday, April 24) The cover story on the California gubernatorial race mourns the decline of that state's politics. Independently wealthy candidates win office with no political background or platform. Career politicians, with solid ideas, can't raise enough money to keep up. Since California voters use ballot initiatives for serious policy changes, they don't mind electing do-nothing plutocrats. ... A story says the White House is terrified of Dick Morris, because he knows a lot of Clinton dirt that he hasn't yet dished. His recent assignments with conservative Rupert Murdoch (commentating on the Fox News cable channel, writing for the New York Post ) suggest he's turned on Clinton. ... An article deplores the glut of tell-all books by prospective presidential candidates (Newt Gingrich, George Pataki, John Ashcroft). The books, which ignore public policy, are shameless attempts by candidates to humanize themselves for voters. ... Yehuda Amichai contributes a pair of poems and a personal essay about Israel's 50 th anniversary. New York Times Magazine , April 26 (posted Thursday, April 23) In the cover story, a scientist seeks the gene that causes an abnormal number of cleft lips and palates in the natives of a Philippine island. Researchers working in remote areas face ethical unease: Locals, valued for their genetic isolation, often don't understand what the research is for and rarely benefit from it. (Some islanders thought children's cleft lips resulted from their parents eating chicken anuses.) ... The magazine profiles Rep. John Kasich, chairman of the House Budget Committee and a long-shot candidate for the Republican presidential nomination in 2000. The Ohioan lacks "gravitas" but is passionate, good with people, highly religious, and an outsider--all positives in the election game. Time and Newsweek , April 27 (posted Tuesday, April 21) Two covers on money. Newsweek claims we're all "married to the market": Americans invest more than ever before (42 percent of households' financial assets are in the stock market), and a crash would so cripple the economy that even noninvestors would suffer. Two accompanying articles argue that the boom will continue (because unemployment and inflation remain low) or will not (because price-to-earnings ratios are too high). Time 's bank-merger cover story assesses the future of money: It will be 1) digital and 2) concentrated in superbanks that handle investments and banking. Conspiracy theorists beware: MasterCard is investing in a chip that can store electronic cash, your medical history, and "keys" to your home and office. Newsweek claims 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. has become "crime time" for American teen-agers. Working parents leave teens unsupervised during afternoons (thanks to budget cuts in after-school programs), leading to greater drug use and delinquency. ... Time , meanwhile, claims that 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. has become God time for American teen-agers. Kids are reintroducing prayer to public schools. After-school prayer clubs skirt church-state separation laws and are popping up "in as many as 1 out of every 4 public schools in the country." Religious teens wear wristbands marked "W.W.J.D." ("What Would Jesus Do?"). U.S. News & World Report , April 27 (posted Tuesday, April 21) The cover story is skeptical about charter schools. The schools can succeed when dedicated teachers push innovative curricula, but in many charter schools profits are more important than education. At some Arizona charter schools, kids attend only four hours a day and learn from computers instead of from teachers. ... A story argues that suburban sprawl penalizes urban residents. Low-density areas don't pay enough taxes to subsidize the roads, schools, and sewers they require. City centers end up paying the difference. This lowers downtown property values and spurs middle-class flight. ... A story says 60 percent of U.S. $100 bills reside in foreign countries. American currency circulating abroad functions as "an interest-free loan to the U.S. government" and demonstrates extreme worldwide confidence in the U.S. economy. The New Yorker , April 27 and May 4 (posted Tuesday, April 21) A "special Europe issue" should be called a special western Europe issue, given that it notices only the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and Denmark. Highlights: The magazine excerpts the wrenching diary of Victor Klemperer, a Jew who managed to survive World War II in Dresden, Germany. (He was married to an Aryan woman.) He loses friends, job, possessions, dignity: "The sadistic machine simply rolls over us." ... A profile of Spanish King Juan Carlos applauds him for transforming a backward fascist dictatorship into a thriving, tolerant democracy. The king saved Spain by surrendering his own power to the people: Now even socialists want to preserve the monarchy. ... A piece says peace in Northern Ireland depends on new definitions of old words: "terrorist," "United Kingdom," "culture" and, most of all, "nation." The peace agreement is premised on the notion that the Irish can live happily without the feeling that they belong to "a well-defined nation." ... A writer visits the Danish town of Billund, the headquarters of the "greatest toy in the world," Lego. The Lego-obsessed town is "three parts charming to ... one part creepy." Lego is not just plastic bricks anymore: It also sells backpacks, shoes, umbrellas, etc.--anything a kid needs. Weekly Standard , April 27 (posted Tuesday, April 21) The cover story argues that we should build more highways. Public transportation has failed (it's neither convenient nor cost efficient), and Americans love their cars. Our roads are congested not because we lack alternative transportation, but because we lack superhighways and connecting roads. (See Slate 's dialogue "The War on Cars.") --Seth Stevenson