Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29547 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
Economist , June 14
12
13
14
15
(posted
16
Saturday, June 14)
17
18
19
Last
20
week's New Republic declared that Africa is "dying." This week's
21
Economist says that it is "emerging." The cheerful cover story and
22
editorial observe that economies are growing across sub-Saharan Africa, commend
23
the tough fiscal and free-market policies of new leaders, and urge the United
24
States and Europe to lift tariffs on African exports. There's a bit of bad
25
news, too. An essay by development-economics guru Jeffrey Sachs rates the
26
importance of geography and climate to economic growth: Tropical regions (e.g.,
27
Africa) are enormously handicapped by their high rates of infectious disease
28
and their low soil fertility. An 18-page survey predicts the globalization of
29
the defense industry. Only international megacontractors such as Boeing have
30
the economies of scale necessary to build expensive high-tech weapons. It also
31
notes that China's defense industry is more primitive than recent publicity
32
suggests.
33
34
35
36
37
Vanity Fair , July 1997
38
39
40
41
(posted
42
Saturday, June 14)
43
44
45
46
Vanity
47
Fair indicates that the Senate's campaign-fund-raising hearings could be
48
the Watergate of the '90s if Sen. Fred Thompson can forge a bipartisan
49
consensus for a deep investigation. But so far, the Democrats aren't
50
cooperating and the Republicans have been ham-handed. (Full disclosure: the
51
piece is co-authored by Slate's Jacob Weisberg.) Yet another VF article
52
about Rupert Murdoch: It handicaps the race to succeed him.
53
Twenty-five-year-old son Lachlan, who ranks highest in the News Corp. empire,
54
is the favorite. But older daughter Elisabeth is tough and smart, and younger
55
son James is the boldest thinker. The cover story gushes about gay divorcée
56
Diana: She's freer, happier, and more devoted to charity than she was as
57
Princess of Wales. And she still wears great clothes.
58
59
60
61
New
62
Republic , June 30
63
64
65
66
(posted
67
Friday, June 13)
68
69
70
The cover
71
story lauds half a dozen big-city mayors as the potential saviors of American
72
politics. New York's Rudolph Giuliani, Los Angeles' Richard Riordan, Chicago's
73
Richard Daley, and other mayors are championing efficient government and free
74
enterprise while opposing identity politics and income redistribution. These
75
"new Progressives," who are simultaneously liberal and conservative,
76
could inspire a new centrist political coalition. The "TRB" column parodies the truth-stretching Robert Reich, imagining
77
him as Walter Mitty. (See Slate's "Robert Reich,
78
Quote Doctor.") A writer travels to Baghdad and finds Iraqis despairing:
79
Food and jobs are scarce, travel is impossible, and internal security is
80
overbearing.
81
82
83
84
New
85
York Times Magazine , June 15
86
87
88
89
(posted
90
Thursday, June 12)
91
92
93
The cover
94
story credits hospitals with improving their response to medical errors.
95
Instead of finding scapegoats, they now encourage doctors and nurses to admit
96
mistakes (no punishment attached) in order to prevent future ones. Problem:
97
Malpractice lawyers profit when hospitals confess error. The magazine profiles
98
the high-achieving Emanuel brothers: presidential adviser Rahm, Hollywood agent
99
Ari, and medical ethicist Zeke. A competitive, intellectual upbringing made
100
them obnoxious, passionate, smart, and fabulously successful. Also, a pair of
101
Microsoft articles. One deplores "Microspeak," the company's hideous,
102
responsibility-avoiding euphemisms: A bug, for example, is a "known issue." The
103
other story suggests that the young pundits on MSNBC may represent a sea change
104
in American politics. Their anti-government, anti-politics libertarianism could
105
be the ideology of the future. Too bad no one's watching them.
106
107
108
109
110
Wired , July 1997
111
112
113
114
(posted
115
Thursday, June 12)
116
117
118
Highly
119
Panglossian. "The Long Boom" projects 25 years of global economic
120
prosperity. Thanks to free markets and (of course) high technology,
121
productivity will increase, environmental degradation will decrease, genetic
122
diseases will be eradicated, and a worldwide, multicultural civilization will
123
flourish. Possible obstacles: a plague, an ecological crisis, a U.S.-China war.
124
The piece includes a "world history" chart for the years 1980-2020: "Immigrants
125
drive revival of family" in 2014-16. "First designer kid" in 2020.
126
127
128
129
130
Time and Newsweek , June 16
131
132
133
134
(posted
135
Tuesday, June 10)
136
137
138
139
Time and
140
Newsweek publish identical cover headlines--"Should He Die?"--and nearly identical stories about Timothy
141
McVeigh. Both say that America is eager for revenge and note that McVeigh is
142
the ideal candidate for execution--remorseless, intelligent, well defended,
143
white. Bud Welch, the father of an Oklahoma City victim, writes columns in
144
Time and Newsweek about why he opposes McVeigh's
145
execution. Time argues that the death penalty doesn't seem to deter crime,
146
doesn't comfort victims' families, and is racially skewed. Time also has a
147
creepy photo feature about prison death chambers.
148
149
150
Newsweek 's package of
151
stories on the military-and-adultery mess praises Defense Secretary William
152
Cohen's effort to end the witch hunt, but faults him for defending Gen. Joseph
153
Ralston and not a lower-ranking officer. Kelly Flinn--last week's poster girl
154
for the issue--writes a piece condemning this double standard: Why was she
155
ostracized and Ralston helped? The magazine profiles Anson Chan, the
156
much-admired head of Hong Kong's civil service. She is the colony's "canary in
157
a coal mine": If the Chinese stifle her, it will be a sure sign that Hong Kong
158
is in trouble.
159
160
161
162
Time derides John Gray, the author of Men Are From Mars,
163
Women Are From Venus , as an egomaniacal huckster who's making millions
164
selling banalities to vulnerable couples.
165
166
167
168
U.S.
169
News & World Report , June 16
170
171
172
173
(posted
174
Tuesday, June 10)
175
176
177
The death
178
penalty/McVeigh cover story also concludes that executions don't solace
179
victims' families. A piece accuses the Japan External Trade Organization, a U.S.-based
180
Japanese government agency, of snooping on U.S. companies in the United States.
181
JETRO is supposed to promote U.S. exports to Japan, but actually helps Japanese
182
companies acquire advanced American technology. U.S. News profiles a respected geologist whose computer models "prove" that
183
the Biblical Flood occurred.
184
185
186
187
The
188
New Yorker , June 16
189
190
191
192
(posted
193
Tuesday, June 10)
194
195
196
197
198
The
199
New Yorker chronicles the bitter fight over Kennewick Man, a
200
skeleton with Caucasoid features discovered recently in Washington state. The
201
9,000-year-old skeleton is evidence that Europeans arrived in the United States
202
before Native Americans, who migrated from Asia. Native Americans insist that
203
the skeleton be reburied. The federal government has seized the bones and
204
forbidden further scientific examination. An article discusses the popular idea
205
of letting inner-city churches operate government welfare programs. Republicans
206
are keen on this, but the church-state questions are tricky. If the churches
207
proselytize, they may violate the First Amendment. If they don't proselytize,
208
they may be ineffective.
209
210
211
212
213
Weekly Standard , June 16
214
215
216
217
(posted
218
Tuesday, June 10)
219
220
221
The cover
222
story worries that John Kasich is the future of the Republican Party. The House
223
Budget Committee chairman is an eager beaver and a wonderful speaker, but he's
224
too narcissistic, too populist, and too willing to compromise with Democrats.
225
Also, the backlash against the Kenneth Starr backlash. Contrary to a recent
226
New York Times Magazine story, the independent counsel is not to
227
blame for the sluggish pace of the Whitewater investigation: Stonewalling by
228
Clinton and his allies have impeded the probe.
229
230
231
232
The
233
Nation , June 23
234
235
236
237
(posted
238
Tuesday, June 10)
239
240
241
Computer
242
databases make too much data available too easily, so the government must
243
intervene to protect Internet privacy, argues the cover
244
story. A piece defends New York City rent control. (For more on rent
245
control, see Slate's "Such a
246
Deal" and the "Dialogue" it sparked.) Press reports wrongly suggest that
247
most beneficiaries of rent control are rich. In fact, it is mostly
248
working-class folks who will be driven out of the city if the controls are
249
lifted.
250
251
252
253
254
255