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Economist , Aug. 15
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(posted
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Saturday, Aug. 15, 1998)
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The
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cover editorial on terrorism says Middle East radicals
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hate the United States because of America's peacekeeping efforts in the region.
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Compared to other Western nations, the United States is extremely hard on Iran
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and Iraq, which draws the ire of terrorists. A related piece forecasts scary "new terrorism," including
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biological or poison gas attacks within the United States and "cyber-attacks"
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that could crash the world's financial and communications systems ... A
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piece laments the "woes" of Madeleine Albright, whose opinions on Iraq, Israel,
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and even her pet eastern Europe are ignored by Congress, the White House, and
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other policymakers. She seems to have "less leverage at the White House than
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Israel's lobbyists."
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New
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Republic , Aug. 31
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(posted
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Friday, Aug. 14, 1998)
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The cover
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package is split between Washington bimbroglio and Africa bombings: On both
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scores Clinton is stressed. On the home front, a piece suggests new evasion
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tactics for Clinton, including the "Roger Defense"--it's my brother's DNA. On
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the bombing front, an article says that since it's tough to guard against
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terrorist attacks, Washington should muscle up for a crackdown afterward.
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Another piece retraces CNN's perilous journey in 1997 to track down Saudi
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multimillionaire Osama Bin Laden, a suspect in the Africa bombings.
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(
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Slate
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's "Explainer"
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also scopes out Bin Laden.) ... Like the New York Times Magazine ,
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TNR also recaps the '60s trajectory from "heady liberal optimism" to
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black power and anti-war frenzy. End result? America graduated from a "culture
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of toil, sacrifice, saving, and abstinence" to a "culture of consumption,
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lifestyle, and quality of life."
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New
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York Times Magazine , Aug. 16
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(posted
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Friday, Aug. 14, 1998)
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The cover
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package gushes over the WNBA, "A Sport You Can Love." One piece follows a New
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York Liberty road trip, admiring the team's genuine camaraderie, warmth, and
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sheer joy, and calling each game "a celebration of girl power." Another admires
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women's basketball for discouraging "ladylike behavior" and promoting "raucous
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... uninhibited female intensity." ... An essay warns that the rise in
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intermarriage is excluding blacks. Instead of melting into one brown nation,
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America may remain two nations: one beige (white-Hispanic-Asian) and one black.
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... An article wonders why Americans are still fighting the battles of
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1968 while Europeans, for whom those battles were much more intense (Paris
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students, Prague spring), have moved on. Conclusion: Europeans separate
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democracy and culture and so did not let the political fights of '68 spill into
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a cultural war. Americans, who don't separate the two, have transmitted the
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tensions of '68 to issues of education, religion, race, and sexuality.
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Time and Newsweek , Aug. 17
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(posted
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Tuesday, Aug. 11, 1998)
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Newsweek 's cover
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story focuses on the gay "conversion" controversy. Exodus International, among
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the sponsors of the recent round of gay conversion ads, claims it converts 30
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percent of its gay participants to heterosexuality. But, as Newsweek
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notes, Exodus' own ex-gay founders fell in love, left their wives for each
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other, and quit. A related piece, based on polls, says that Americans back gay
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rights in theory but dislike public displays of gay affection. The editor of
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the gay magazine Out urges gays to mingle more with straights and not
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wall themselves in the "gay ghetto."
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Time 's cover story drools over John Glenn, calling his upcoming
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Discovery mission "a timely reminder that we can still have heroes." Why is
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NASA letting the old bird lift off? Space travel mimics the effects of aging
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(bone weakening, sleep disruption, etc.), and NASA wants to know if a
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77-year-old astronaut will suffer the same disabilities.
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Both
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magazines squeeze in last-minute pieces on the African bombings but save plenty
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of space for Monica. Newsweek 's angle: How does the Clinton legal team
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prep a probable liar against a known liar? Answer: Smear Monica.
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Newsweek 's scoop: Kenneth Starr's report to Congress will be pared down
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to cover only Flytrap. Kiss goodbye to Starr's years of work on Whitewater,
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Travelgate, etc. ... Time's blander package has only one revelation: Tripp kept 80-100
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pages of contemporaneous notes about what Monica said, a "skeleton key" for
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Starr to "reconstruct" the affair.
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U.S.
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News & World Report, Aug. 17
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(posted
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Tuesday, Aug. 11, 1998)
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A huge
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package celebrates great inventors of the 20 th century, from
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household names such as the Wright brothers and Edward Teller to obscurities
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such as Philo Farnsworth, who invented the television at age 22 only to
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have RCA copy him, bully him, and reap the economic rewards. One inventor is
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dissed: Alexander Fleming, a scientist of "mundane skills,"
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accidentally discovered penicillin, but it was Ernst Chain and Howard Florey
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who actually made penicillin a lifesaving drug. Fleming happily took the
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credit. U.S. News predicts that living machines will be the great invention of the
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21 st century. ... The cover
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package on the embassy bombings suggests that anti-American Saudi
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millionaire Osama Bin Ladin could have funded the bombers. It also notes the
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rise of "cushion-shot terrorism": Terrorists increasingly attack peripheral
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targets, because major targets are too well protected.
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The
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New Yorker , Aug. 17
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(posted
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Tuesday, Aug. 11, 1998)
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A piece
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argues that scientists have grossly overstated the importance of parents in
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molding their children. In fact, children are shaped mostly by other children,
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who serve as role models and guides for living. Children tend to resemble
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parents only because they share genes, not because they are influenced by them.
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Evidence: Adopted children have as much in common with random adults as with
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their adoptive parents. ... An article warns that today's stock market
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conditions dangerously resemble those of 1929. Inflation is low, growth is
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slowing, the world economy is uncertain, and investors are ignoring repeated
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warnings by the Fed chairman. Alan Greenspan must stop merely warning and start
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acting, raising interest rates enough to stop the market euphoria. A recession
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is inevitable, and we need Fed intervention to ensure it's a mild one.
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The
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Nation , Aug. 24 and 31
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(posted
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Tuesday, Aug. 11, 1998)
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The
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cover story weighs the
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prospect of a Jesse Jackson presidential candidacy. The Reverend is second to
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Vice President Gore in opinion polls, drawing 12 percent of Democratic support,
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and he may be the only candidate who could bring attention to progressive/labor
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issues. Snags: 1) Jackson is increasingly friendly with Wall Streeters, an
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alliance that troubles many lefties; 2) he will certainly lose; and 3) he may
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lack the selflessness required to build an organization that would endure after
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his loss. Why would he run? Because he is desperate to remain important.
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--Kate
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Galbraith
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