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Economist , Oct. 25
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(posted
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Saturday, Oct. 25)
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A cover
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editorial praises Bill Clinton for softening his policy toward China. He once
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threatened to withhold MFN; now he engages China through trade. Engagement,
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coupled with an active military presence in the Far East, will keep China from
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endangering the world. A story recommends that baseball teams share television
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revenue. Currently, teams in small television markets can't afford to pay great
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players and thus can't compete. An essay lauds the creative charity of George
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Soros, who eschews boring gifts to wealthy colleges and museums. Instead Soros
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funds drug decriminalization, immigration reform, and Eastern European
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democracy--projects that may change society. Utterly Predictable Department: A
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review showers yet more praise on the universally acclaimed Guggenheim Museum
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in Bilbao, Spain.
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New
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Republic , Nov. 10
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(posted
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Friday, Oct. 24)
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An
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article says UNICEF doesn't deserve your Halloween money. Donations feed its
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wasteful bureaucracy, not starving children. A story mocks America's burgeoning
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dread of germs. New, incredibly popular "antibacterial" products rely on fear
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to boost sales, yet are largely ineffective in fighting bacteria. The piece
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also notes that bacteria aren't so dangerous that we need to be constantly
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paranoid about them. "TRB" urges liberals to embrace school vouchers. The poor
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should be able to flee bad schools just like the rich, and the competition will
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strengthen public education.
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New
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York Times Magazine , Oct. 26
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(posted
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Thursday, Oct. 23)
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A cover
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story ponders the medical and ethical issues raised by post-menopausal
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pregnancies. Thanks to donated eggs and sperm, women in their 60s now can give
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birth. Older mothers face high health risks and, as they become elderly, might
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not be up to the job of parenting. It's just plain unnatural, some doctors say.
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A feature story says Detroit Piston Grant Hill is ready to dominate basketball.
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The fourth-year forward hopes to shed his deferential reputation: "I think I
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can be the best player in the NBA, and I want to show it."
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Time and
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Newsweek , Oct. 27
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(posted
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Tuesday, Oct. 21)
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School's in at both
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magazines. Time 's cover package considers "what makes a good school."
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Recommendations: good after-school programs, lots of computers, smaller
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classes, and higher standards for teachers. Time also tracks the
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growing popularity of school vouchers among blacks in
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inner cities. Republicans hope to attract black voters with the issue.
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Newsweek 's cover story explores how schools handle learning
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disabilities. Early diagnosis, new teaching techniques (emphasis on the arts,
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thematic programs), and new research into the brains of LD kids are starting to
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rectify a neglected problem. Shocking stat: "[A]s many as 20 percent of
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schoolchildren may have a neurological deficit, ranging from mild to severe,
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that makes it hard for them to read and write."
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Time interviews Chinese President Jiang Zemin. When Time
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asks if Jiang should make a "gesture on human rights" to ease relations with
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America, Jiang replies: "I would like to know what you refer to specifically as
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a gesture. We have made it clear that we respect human rights." A Time
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investigation finds that nursing homes neglect patients:
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Seniors have died of thirst and starvation; some facilities are crawling with
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maggots.
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In
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Newsweek , Dan Quayle derides Al Gore's recent praise for Ellen :
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"By paying homage both to Hollywood and to the gay lobby, Al Gore has beaten
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his rivals to the cash machine." Quayle does give Gore points for recognizing
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Hollywood's power to shape culture. Also in Newsweek , drug-of-last-week
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ketamine, or "Special K" (see last week's Time), gives way to drug-of-this-week gamma
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hydroxybutyrate, known as "GHB" or "Grievous Bodily Harm." The
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inhibition-lowering chemical is catching on at parties, and has been linked to
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at least 20 deaths.
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U.S.
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News & World Report , Oct. 27
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(posted
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Tuesday, Oct. 21)
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"The 1998
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Career Guide" says hot
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career paths include: animator, crisis specialist, corrections officer,
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grief therapist, and cosmetic dentist. A companion piece notes that a growing number of companies pay full
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salaries for four-day workweeks. Four-day employees are actually more
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productive in the office. A story argues that the new Labor government is dumbing down
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British culture. An "art for everyone" policy pitches opera to soccer fans and
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adds prurient plot lines to once-staid radio shows. Also, an article predicts that smart cards, a microchip-laden credit/debit
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card, already popular in Europe, will soon catch on in America: "In theory, a
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single smart card could replace a fistful of credit and debit cards, serve as a
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driver's license, store a person's medical history, feed a parking meter, and
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function as a tamperproof personal ID encoded with an individual's
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fingerprint."
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Weekly Standard , Oct. 27
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(posted
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Tuesday, Oct. 21)
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The cover
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essay lambastes the talk show Politically Incorrect for its inane
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discourse: "The pace is plodding, as host and guests struggle to figure out
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what it is they're talking about." A story concludes that Vincent Foster
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committed suicide, and that the conspiracy theories hold no water. The real
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cover-up was the post-suicide removal of documents from Foster's office. Also,
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an editorial condemns Republicans for avoiding the accelerating fight against
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racial preferences: "It won't do for Republicans to delay the prize of
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colorblindness, even for a moment, by silently ignoring the battle while it's
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waged."
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Harper's , November 1997
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(posted
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Thursday, Oct. 16)
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Harper's runs nine newly discovered short stories by Anton Chekhov.
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Written during a feverish tuberculosis fit when Chekhov was in his early 20s,
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titles include: "On the Train," "Sarah Bernhardt Comes to Town," "From the
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Diary of an Assistant Bookkeeper," and "Elements Most Often Found in Novels,
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Short Stories, Etc." A story reports from a funeral directors' convention--they
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see big business in millions of aging baby boomers. (Hot cremation stat: "[T]he
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average person takes an hour and a half to burn.") A book review calls
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Underworld Don DeLillo's best work. Among his contemporaries, DeLillo
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"is the shrewdest observer of his neighbors and the purest and most native
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prose stylist." (Click here for Walter Kirn's review of the book in Slate.)
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--Compiled by Seth Stevenson and the editors of Slate .
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