Economist , May 9 (posted Saturday, May 9, 1998) The cover editorial praises the Daimler-Chrysler merger for ushering in an era of cross-border car manufacturing. Jingoistic pride thwarted past proposed international mergers, and led to quotas, tariffs and overcapacity at many auto plants worldwide. ... A story says scientists may have found the reason for cystic fibrosis. Inheriting a faulty gene from both parents means getting this fatal disease. Inheriting the faulty gene from only one parent means no cystic fibrosis and also means immunity to typhoid. Once, this may have been a wise genetic trade-off, but typhoid has now disappeared. ... The obituary mourns Samuel Cummings, "probably the world's biggest private dealer in small arms." An utterly amoral yet entirely licit businessman, Cummings sold weapons to Castro, Haiti's Duvaliers, and countless guerillas in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Business suffered when, post-Cold War, millions of Soviet guns hit the open market. New Republic , May 25 (posted Friday, May 8, 1998) A story deplores efforts by U.S. corporations to prevent economic sanctions against rogue nations. A corporate umbrella group named USA*Engage is lobbying fiercely and successfully against sanctions: In 1996, "23 sanctions were put in place; in 1997, only two countries ... were sanctioned." This is troubling, because sanctions are more effective at undermining evil regimes than trading is at democratizing them. ... A piece welcomes the proposed merger of the American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association, saying it would create a unified voice on education. But the NEA may be too defensive and too politically correct to ally with the bold, reform-minded AFT. Early indications suggest members will vote down the merger. New York Times Magazine , May 10 (posted Thursday, May 7, 1998) A couple of months ago John Travolta and Primary Colors made the rounds of magazine covers. The political movie puffery continues with Warren Beatty and Bulworth . The cover story on Beatty, a longtime Democratic activist, says his new movie is the most radical political statement of his career. In the film a senator discards politics as usual and starts talking straight, especially about race. He speaks in rhyme: Beatty says he met with many rappers before writing the senator's dialogue. ... An article says biologists are breeding better bees. Farmers rely heavily on honeybees to pollinate crops, but new, specialized bees are quicker, more effective fertilizers. For instance, honeybees have adapted to steal alfalfa nectar without taking pollen--not so leafcutter bees, which pollinate alfalfa like champs. National Review , May 18 (posted Thursday, May 7, 1998) The cover article urges the GOP and the Christian right to compromise. Religious conservatives complain that the GOP has ignored their causes. In fact, the Christian right is politically naive, and its intractability dooms its own goals. An accompanying piece says Republicans no longer own a monopoly on pro-lifers. Several pro-life Dems are mounting serious campaigns at the state level, often against pro-choice Republicans. People , May 11 (posted Thursday, May 7, 1998) People presents the "50 Most Beautiful People in the World," 1998 version. Obvious inclusions: Leonardo DiCaprio, Gwyneth Paltrow, Prince William, and Cameron Diaz. Surprising inclusions: Tony Blair, Titanic 's Gloria Stuart. Highbrow cheesecake: Arundhati Roy. Shocking omissions: JFK Jr. (Wasn't he their "Sexiest Man Alive" for 12 years running? What changed?) and the Family Research Council's Gary Bauer. An accompanying piece introduces us to "Real-Life ER Beauties": Julianna Margulies and George Clooney have nothing on these hot docs, contends the article. Time and Newsweek , May 11 (posted Tuesday, May 5, 1998) Newsweek 's cover story: how to raise male children. Boys are more enthusiastic and just as emotional as girls but less able to express themselves. Give them lots of affection: They need it even though they pretend to hate it. ... Time 's peculiar cover story follows the sad case of a banker whose ex-wife abducted their children and is now in hiding. Grass-roots networks designed to protect women in abusive marriages can sometimes keep innocent fathers from their kids. Newsweek wonders how health insurance will cover Viagra. Most health insurance covers "quality of life" afflictions such as arthritis, but how much sex is required for a decent quality of life? (We refrain from making a joke about this, the only publication in America to do so.) ... Following the lead of many newspapers, Newsweek excerpts the Unabomber's diary. Standard grim quote: Ted Kaczynski writes of a fatal bomb, "Excellent. Humane way to eliminate somebody." A week after U.S. News , Time examines the growing influence of Christian conservative James Dobson. The Christian right's latest coup: blocking the nomination of an openly gay man to be ambassador of Luxembourg. ... A story says the Chinese government is surprisingly tolerant of the Internet's expansion in China. While the government blocks many sites (notably cnn.com), most citizens find ways around barriers, and the government encourages the Net as a means of increasing commerce. Both magazines preview the big summer movies. Much hyped: Godzilla , The Truman Show , Armageddon , Saving Private Ryan . U.S. News & World Report , May 11 (posted Tuesday, May 5, 1998) The cover story on the "next pope" profiles leading candidates. Insiders bet the new pope will share John Paul II's conservative traditionalism and be "a noncontroversial figure, in his mid-60s, who is multilingual, has curial experience, and is archbishop in a nation that is not a major power." ... "News You Can Use" finds the safest airplane seat. Not in the back--turbulence is worse there; not in the front--in a nosedive, you go first; not by a window--you'll have to climb over neighbors in a crash; and not on the aisle--heavy luggage can fall from overhead bins and injure you. Oh, and definitely buckle your seat belt. The New Yorker , May 11 (posted Tuesday, May 5, 1998) "The Shadow Epidemic" charts the alarming rise of hepatitis-C, a disease that infects four times as many Americans as HIV, kills 10,000 a year, and is largely untreatable. There are no early symptoms, and many hepatitis-C victims aren't aware they have the disease until their liver is nearly destroyed. Sex and shared needles easily transmit the disease, and anyone who received a blood transfusion before 1992 is at serious risk. ... A piece says the United Nations knew that Rwandan Hutus were preparing to slaughter Tutsis three months before the 1994 massacre. The U.N. force in Rwanda could have taken simple steps to prevent killing, but U.N. higher-ups declined to act. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, then head of U.N. peacekeeping, probably was one of those higher-ups. ... A profile of Hollywood mogul Edgar Bronfman Jr. says he is being fleeced by his entertainment-industry business partners. His studio, Universal, is struggling largely because Bronfman has cut foolish deals with Barry Diller, DreamWorks, and lots of producers. The genial Bronfman has also hired too many nice guys to work for him. (See Slate 's "Assessment" of Bronfman and his father.) The Nation , May 18 (posted Tuesday, May 5, 1998) The cover story profiles Minnesota Sen. Paul Wellstone, a possible contender for the 2000 Democratic presidential nomination. Wellstone boasts old-time liberal populist values but lacks the ego and charisma to win votes. Possible mission: Win a big enough coalition to drive the party to the left. ... A story slams Proposition 226, a California initiative that would "compel unions to obtain the permission of members annually before using their dues for political activity." The bill would crush unions' political strength, since thorny logistics make it costly and difficult to get permission on a yearly basis. Backers of the bill: Richard Mellon Scaife, Grover Norquist, and anti-union companies. Weekly Standard , May 11 (posted Tuesday, May 5, 1998) The cover essay defends Israel as the last hope for Judaism (and a fragile hope at that). Outside Israel, intermarriage and assimilation are quickly eroding Jewish communities. Inside Israel, Jews are alarmingly vulnerable to violent attacks from neighbors. Israel's fall would relegate Jews to curious obscurity--somewhat like the Amish. --Seth Stevenson