Economist , May 16 (posted Saturday, May 16, 1998) The lead editorial frets over crises in India and Indonesia. The international community must level sanctions on India for its nuclear tests, or other near-nuke countries (Taiwan, Iraq) will be tempted to conduct their own tests. India's government is using the tests for political gain, because the economy is weak. On the Indonesian front, the editorial calls for Suharto's army to abandon him and for the International Monetary Fund to withhold loans unless Suharto steps down. ... An editorial claims that Israel is to blame for the gradual breakdown of the Middle East peace process. The United States should stop feebly appeasing Israel and start making clear, unwavering demands. ... A book review tells the fascinating story of W.C. Minor, major contributor to the original Oxford English Dictionary . A schizophrenic, Minor was in the midst of a delusion when he shot a man. He filed his excellent entries from a prison-hospital for the criminally insane. "He was given two cells, one of which he turned into a library and filled with antiquarian books; he was allowed to practise his flute and paint water-colours; and he was even allowed a knife, to cut the pages of the old books, although in the end he used it to slice off his penis." Details , June 1998 (posted Saturday, May 16, 1998) A story profiles Jared Paul Stern, promising young gossip columnist for the New York Post 's "Page Six." Foppishly dressed and snottily mannered, Stern always gets his dish--but not without incurring the hatred of seemingly all New York. The piece points out that gossip columnists are generally far more seasoned than the 27-year-old Stern: "Stern's success in the gossip world is seen by many not only as an indictment of his moral character--surely it should take years for a person to become this shallow?--but as a maddening violation of the professional rules." New Republic , June 1 (posted Friday, May 15, 1998) The magazine apologizes for having published fabricated articles by Stephen Glass and announces Glass' dismissal as associate editor. It acknowledges that, as has been widely reported, Glass invented characters, organizations, and events in the recent article "Hack Heaven" and other pieces. How did it happen? "For reasons known only to him, Glass mounted what appears to have been quite an elaborate effort, including the falsification of documents and reporter's notes, to trick our editors and elude our fact-checkers." (For more on the uproar, see Jack Shafer's "Glass Houses.") ... The cover story notes the growing irrelevance of college presidents. Once, they were revered public intellectuals; now, they spend more than half their time fund raising and most of the rest on administration. They don't take high-profile stances for fear of a backlash. (Full disclosure: Slate 's David Greenberg wrote the piece.) ... An article says Democrats are secretly planning a report about Kenneth Starr's alleged "illegal collusion" with right-wing Clinton enemies. At a time when Clinton is being compared to Nixon, the report would be designed to make Starr look Nixonian. New York Times Magazine , May 17 (posted Thursday, May 14, 1998) Another special issue. Theme: 13-year-olds. Dozens of photographs portray neo-teens in school, on the family farm, on inner city streets, at the mall, and in their bedrooms (all of which are apparently decorated with Hanson posters). Basic conclusion: Though cliquey, 13-year-olds are basically nice, innocent kids (who really like Hanson). 13-year-old boy on going out with girls: "You even talk to them--even if it's just over the phone." 13-year-old Latino gang member: "I ain't down to die right now, for I'm barely having fun. I don't want to die right now." 13-year-old girl: "I hate the people in our grade--they're all so boring! People usually think we're older, and we hang out with 15-year-olds. They're just so much fun." Vanity Fair , June 1998 (posted Thursday, May 14, 1998) Vanity Fair profiles socially maladjusted genius John Forbes Nash Jr. Nash took the Princeton math department by storm in the '40s and '50s and is often considered the godfather of game theory. In the '60s, he succumbed to schizophrenia, believing himself a "messianic figure of great but secret importance" and writing cryptic messages, such as "Mao Tse-tung's Bar Mitzvah was 13 years, 13 months, and 13 days after Brezhnev's circumcision." Nash suddenly regained his sanity in the late '80s and then won the 1994 Nobel Memorial Prize in economics. Time and Newsweek , May 18 (posted Tuesday, May 12, 1998) The cancer hoopla allows the newsweeklies to strike a favorite pose: pretending to preach caution while actually hyping madly. The large print on Newsweek 's cover reads "Cancer Cure," while Time puts a huge red X through the word "Cancer." Beneath, they run sober (and nearly identical) small print: "The Hope and the Hype--Behind the Latest Breakthroughs," Newsweek ; "How to Tell the Hype From the Hope," Time . Their inside stories, too, are cautious, noting that the new anti-angiogenic drugs are extremely promising but not a miracle cure. (Both mags rap the New York Times for its overenthusiastic endorsement.) Time runs an excellent chart of the various kinds of cancer treatments. Requisite Wall Street angle: Time says biotech stocks are undervalued; Newsweek says they're still too volatile to be reliable investments. Time reports that Kenneth Starr's prosecutors have been meeting secretly with Secret Service agents. Despite pressure from Starr's team, the agents refuse to discuss any specifics about Clinton's meetings with Monica Lewinsky. ... Time 's farewell to Seinfeld says that it 1) has a much smaller audience than many popular sitcoms of the last generation; 2) is not the first show "about nothing" ( Three's Company ); and 3) is not even the funniest show on television ( The Simpsons ). Newsweek likens Apple's new iMac to the Volkswagen Beetle, saying it's both fun and functional. Steven Jobs really does seem to have revived Apple, which has now had two profitable quarters in a row. ... Also, a profanity-laced jail interview with gangsta rap tycoon Suge Knight. He blames his imprisonment on rivals jealous of his company, Death Row Records. U.S. News & World Report , May 18 (posted Tuesday, May 12, 1998) Its cancer cover concurs with Time and Newsweek that the anti-angiogenic drugs won't work as well in humans as they do in mice. It also explains why human trials of the drugs can't begin for at least a year: The current total supply of the drugs is only enough to treat a few mice. ... A piece describes the growing conflict between skinheads and rappers--in Moscow. Neo-Nazi skinheads, who beat up an African-American Marine last week, hate the (slightly) more racially tolerant rappers, who imitate black American fashion and music. ... The magazine says the Internal Revenue Service is being scapegoated for the wrong reasons. In fact, criminal tax prosecutions are decreasing . Most of the IRS's stumbles are caused by outdated computers, not rogue agents. The New Yorker , May 18 (posted Tuesday, May 12, 1998) A Ken Starr profile says he is a moderate, inside-the-Beltway schmoozer, not a Torquemada. Starr's first year as independent counsel was vigorous and effective, but he has been bogged down by Clinton's stonewalling and the decay of his own staff. Starr's original experienced deputies have been replaced by young lawyers with little prosecutorial experience. ... A respectful profile of Robert Redford--pegged to his new movie, The Horse Whisperer --says he's "wraithlike" and private. But he is responsible for "some of America's most defining contemporary images: the investigative reporter, the loner, the defender of the unregulated outdoors," etc. ... A piece says major-league pitchers are injuring their arms more frequently because the mound is too low, the strike zone is too small, and the rise of other sports (soccer, basketball) has diminished the supply of major leaguers with strong arms. Weekly Standard , May 18 (posted Tuesday, May 12, 1998) A long story exposes wrongheaded sexual correctness in the military. Jackie Parker, who sought to be the first woman to fly an F-16 in combat, complained that her New York Air National Guard unit mistreated her, ending the careers of many of the unit's pilots. In fact, says the Standard , Parker was unqualified to fly F-16s, was given favorable treatment by higher-ups because she was a woman, destroyed morale by sleeping with her supervisor, and herself sexually harassed male pilots. Lesson: The gender wars are undermining military effectiveness. --David Plotz